DaveKillens wrote:But if the brake caliper was allowed to float freely relative to the suspension, and an arm located between the caliper and chassis was used to transmit brake force, then you could influence the movement of the chassis relaitive to brake force and torque.
I read this post from DaveKillens and I thought: yeah, he is right,
there are no arms between the caliper and the body, only the wishbone arms...
Well, after going through this thread I was looking for clutch pictures when I found this picture of 2005 Toyota's transaxle.
Suddenly I realized that this huge carbon composite wings behind the transaxles are joining the body of the car with the wheels. Well, it is the rear arm of the wishbone, I thought. Huge arm, probably for huge torque demands...
I never took a close look to an F1 transaxle before. I have made some, "layman engineer" questions on suspension, so here goes another:
Are there some invisible joints that allow the wheel to move? Does the carbon thing flex only? It is the rear arm of the wishbone? If so, where are the joints? Does this affect the conclusion of this thread on caliper position?
BTW, funny how the full carbon fiber part ressembles an airplane...