bhallg2k wrote:Yeah, after it was preemptively banned this past winter, Ferrari claimed to have never developed a reactive ride height system. But, I wonder if that's true.
J-Damper are not a ride height system, and they were banned two times under different names. As far as I understand is that they decouple the chassis from the oscillaton of the tires, elseway the added inertia of the chassis would prolong that oscillation so that the tires are loaded long after the corner is over. This is countered by the normal dampers but they make the suspension more lazy to respond (on turn-in for example). J-Dampers would have allowed much softer normal dampers -> longer tire life.
The ride height control under braking (where LRGPs solution was banned in the winter) could have replaced the anti-dive function of the front suspension almost completely (also aiding front aero as wishbones could be parallel to the road, rather than anti-dive).
I think McLaren was interested in such a system as well but waited to see how LRGPs would pan out. Their brake-based solution could have been adapted quite fast so no need to put money in a system that you can simply copy. Also FIA gave LRGP the go ahead a long time ago but nowadays they see movable aero everywhere.