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WhiteBlue wrote:Good morning Macca.McLaren suspects adjustable ride-height on Red Bull
ESPNF1 Staff
March 27, 2010
Red Bull could be gaining a controversial advantage in qualifying
McLaren's Martin Whitmarsh has suggested Red Bull's car might be hiding a controversial driver-adjustable ride-height system, after the two RB6s dominated qualifying in Melbourne.
The difference between a car laden with fuel for the start of the race and one running on fumes in qualifying is so great that the weight of the petrol physically alters the height of the car. This means most teams have to run the car relatively high in qualifying, at a disadvantage, in order to compensate for the weight of the full tank needed to start the race. But during qualifying on Saturday, on-board footage from Mark Webber's Red Bull appeared to show the car occasionally bottoming-out.
McLaren boss Whitmarsh told the BBC after the session that, following a similar situation in Bahrain, he wondered why the Red Bulls were not "dragging their arses on full tanks" in the race. He said it is "evidence of ride-height control systems" being in use, "which many people wouldn't have thought were permissible".
In the wake of last year's diffuser row, and the McLaren F-duct saga in Bahrain, F1 could now be set for its next technical controversy. Whitmarsh said McLaren is now "working quite hard" on implementing a Red Bull-like ride-height system, and "hopefully by China we'll have something on the car".
It goes much further back than that.Professor wrote:Here is some information about the road car system mentioned above by Bill Shoe:
http://www.formula1journal.com/
A minimum 'static' ride height is not the same as the ride height variation between fully heavy and fully light if any fine control is to result.DaveW wrote:Manipulating the running average ride height of a race vehicle does not require Nivomat dampers, pre-load adjusters, or anything "trick" or remotely illegal, as any engineer working in a race series imposing a minimum static ride height will tell you.
Where are the NASCAR or hill climber posters?
The link above gives an excellent detailed description of the Nivomat damper.Professor wrote:Here is some information about the road car system mentioned above by Bill Shoe:
http://www.formula1journal.com/
Apologies, Bill, but ride height manipulation in series like NASCAR is a little more sophisticated than your explanation would suggest - which, by the way, wouldn't work even on the Daytona oval (think about lateral balance). Something similar could easily be used by F1 teams to control the variation in ride height with fuel burn. To put the problem into context, you might like to consider the ratio of fuel weight to down force at terminal airspeed (which the suspension also has to cope with).bill shoe wrote:Regarding NASCAR and other series where there has traditionally been manipulation around minimum (static) ride height rules: It's my understanding that most of that manipulation, at least at tracks like Daytona, simply consisted of having one-way shocks that slammed the car down until it had no functioning suspension left.
Lets put it this way breezy and I am sorry it has no aero at all.BreezyRacer wrote:How can you possibly make a passive system that raises as weight is added (fuel in this case)??????
I'm anxiously awaiting this piece of magic ..