I think one of the consequences of the mass damper is that it will keep the ride height more constant. This therefore has a (positive) aerodynamic influence.
There is an interesting piece about them here.
I would like to add that this happened (initially) because the Citröen had outboard brakes, so they needed the system in the rear wheels (initially, again) to dampen the extra unsprung mass, which would have forced the rear wheels to bump. I once drove a Citröen with a broken damper and it was horrible.747heavy wrote:...
The Citroen 2CV used such a system.
I heard it came from other team than Ferrari.DaveW wrote:Rubbish, if I may say so.... The ban had much to do with Ferrari's claim that they didn't work with Bridgestone tyres. That was also rubbish. The most likely reason was that Ferrari failed to tune them to the correct frequency.
not 100% sure I can follow you here Bill.bill shoe wrote: The mode with no damping from the conventional shock is tire bounce (conventional wisdom on internet says 2-6 hz for street car), so this seems like a plausible candidate too.
Hmmm, now that I think about it, the wheel hop mode is the result of parallel compliance from both the (damped) conventional suspension and the (undamped) tire stiffness.
Tire bouncing of course results from tire compliance alone.
My previous rambling was probably not as clear as it could have been.747heavy wrote: not 100% sure I can follow you here Bill.
what is the base of this "conventional wisdom"?
If you see the tire in isolation, and neglect it´s internal damping, you end with
and mass of the tire/rim and the spring rate of the tire.
Most likely this will result in higher freguencies then 2-6 Hz, don´t you think?
And do we talk about road/race cars in general, or specific F1, if the former why to you think that this fequency is not damped by the "normal" suspension?
As long as the suspension moves, the dampers normally dissipate energy out of this movement.
The mass in the 2CV suspension is said to have been ~3.5 kg
n smikle wrote:The mass dampers are there to absorb vibrations that the regular shocks cannot. riiight?
The two statements above contradict each other IMO.If we look on the mass damper as one system, the mass damper has no damping unto itself OR ELSE it would just be another regular damper. The mass damper has one small range of frequencies that it can work at. A viscous damper can work at a large range of frequencies. Correct or Incorrect?
a TMD does not disipate energy, that is correct, it changes the frequency response of an given spring/mass system, by shifting the resonance frequency.n smikle wrote: Ok.. let's get on thing straight here.. The mass dampers are there to absorb vibrations that the regular shocks cannot. riiight? ....
That is EXACTLY what I said before. I just went along with everybody else calling them "dampers." check my previous posts in this topic.timbo wrote:n smikle wrote:The mass dampers are there to absorb vibrations that the regular shocks cannot. riiight?The two statements above contradict each other IMO.If we look on the mass damper as one system, the mass damper has no damping unto itself OR ELSE it would just be another regular damper. The mass damper has one small range of frequencies that it can work at. A viscous damper can work at a large range of frequencies. Correct or Incorrect?
Yes, regular dampers "absorb" vibrations, or more correctly they dissipate energy. A mass on a spring would not dissipate energy so they are very different things, and it is misleading that both are called "dampers" IMO.
The wiki article is quite good
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuned_mass_damper
I like this explanation.747heavy wrote:a TMD does not disipate energy, that is correct, it changes the frequency response of an given spring/mass system, by shifting the resonance frequency.n smikle wrote: Ok.. let's get on thing straight here.. The mass dampers are there to absorb vibrations that the regular shocks cannot. riiight? ....
In simple terms you can look at it, as an oscillation with an 180° phaseshift in relation to your base oscillation, similar to the concept used in noise cancellation headphones.
At the correct frequency (tuned), the mass in the TMD will move down, while the mass in the base spring/damper systems tries to move up and vis versa.
Imagine a small hammer which will hit onto your tire every time it tries to move up, forcing it down again
a bit idealized like this:
A+B would be the load variation at the tire contact patch.
you try to shift the resonance frequency of the base system, out of the normal working range.
http://www.pump-zone.com/index2.php?opt ... orm&id=213
nothing earth shaking, but maybe you find this worth a quick read.n smikle wrote: My real intention in the above post though, is to get a sense of what the design targets are (Real numerical targets)