munudeges wrote:A pull-rod will raise the roll centre
Not necessarily, at least not with the kinematic roll center.
munudeges wrote:and will result in less control over what happens at the contact patch.
A high roll center does mean that more of the roll moment is taken up by the wishbones as opposed to the springs/ARBs. This means you have somewhat less scope to tune the car's lateral load transfer characteristics but unless but as I just stated, pullrod does not necessitate a higher roll center.
munudeges wrote:The tyre sidewalls will have to do more work.
Not if the effective vertical spring rate is the same, which you can do by taking into account the stiffness of the components in between the spring and the upright and the motion ratio of the pullrod and bellcrank. Note that you have to do all of those things with a pushrod suspension as well.
Jersey Tom wrote:The tyre sidewalls will have to do more work. Follow the loads and the forces. The push-rod is closer to the bottom of the tyre and the contact patch and that is extremely easy to understand in pure layman's terms. Anyone who doesn't understand that really has no credibility.
Well, that doesn't make a shred of sense to me.
Well then clearly you have no credibility.
munudeges wrote:The push-rod is closer to the bottom of the tyre and the contact patch and that is extremely easy to understand in pure layman's terms.
That's true, but assuming the upright is stiff, what bearing does that have on anything?
munudeges wrote:The reason why push-rods have become ubiquitous over the past twenty years is because there has been a consensus, and there is a consensus because everyone has arrived at the better solution.
But they're not ubiquitous, and there is no consensus; many teams are running pullrod rears, and ferrari and mclaren either are running or have run pullrod fronts.
munudeges wrote:I can't imagine Raikkonen enjoying this car, let's put it that way.
Just because of the pullrod front? While I am personally of the opinion that pushrod is the way to go, I also believe that even in F1 terms, it doesn't make that much of a difference either way. To say nothing of the fact that they won races in both 2012 and 2013 with a pullrod front, somehow I suspect Raikonnen would prefer to be in the f14t than a caterham or marussia, but we will find out this weekend.