marcush. wrote:refer back to my post:
a hydraulic solution a la wedge adjusters -spring preloaders -can easily perform the required task.
Advantage is it is at least repeatable and could be easily handled by a central hydraulic input when pitting.(bleed open for low ride height ,pressurize for full fuelload.) easy ,reliable not much in terms of weight .
as we now have most of the front suspension with torsion bar arrangements ,one could easily swap the manual screw type adjuster for ride height ,anchoring the end of the torsion bar to the chassis for the hydraulic piston .At the rear with the third damper horizontally arranged ,you just need a adjustable length damper featuring one end with a pistontype rodend arrangement.also easy to do.
Platform adjusters will only change the corner weights of the car not the ride height.
Third spring/damper setups will also not change the ride height either, as they only control pitch movement amount and the speed of them, whether in squat/dive
On a car with pushrod/pullrods and rockers(bell cranks) with the shocks and springs inboard, as with most, if not all of the F1 cars, the only way to change the ride height, is through the length of the push/pull rods. Otherwise all you are doing is compressing the spring and adding "spring preload".
Adding pressure to the shocks won't change ride height either except in a situation that the shock has hydraulic properties and refuses to go into rebound properly, back to the normal ride height with the wrong effect on the car.
"Driving a car as fast as possible (in a race) is all about maintaining the highest possible acceleration level in the appropriate direction." Peter Wright,Techical Director, Team Lotus