I agree 100%, but that’s just a round about way of getting around what I am saying.godlameroso wrote: ↑24 Feb 2022, 23:14The suspension is not an ideal solution, it's A solution. If you are forced to use bump stops to keep the car from bottoming out it still doesn't change the car behavior if it's being caused by aero instability. If you limit suspension travel so the car doesn't get too low, then you also limit suspension travel over bumps, you also limit grip at low speed corners. Whereas if you solve the issue from an aero perspective you free the suspension to work in a greater range of conditions. This is why solving the root issue is the way to go in the long run.Hoffman900 wrote: ↑24 Feb 2022, 23:10Race cars are a series of compromises.godlameroso wrote: ↑24 Feb 2022, 23:04Using suspension to cure this is like using the American healthcare model. You just want a patch that just suppresses the symptoms and doesn't address the root cause. This is a poor approach unless you want repeat customers.
If the ability to control rear ride height is the issue, then the suspension is absolutely the solution.
If the issue is vortex shearing causing a resonance, then yes, it isn’t the sole solution, but it may be a combination of suspension and aero.
Same goes for choke flow caused by flow separations.
It’s an entire package.
I come from the soft spring / big ARB GT world, with progressive stops to smooth the landing. I’m a big believer on getting the mechanical grip component right.
That said, my argument is you can have it both ways, but I suspect the rules have stymied that route by false confidence (ie: banning hydraulic heave springs).
That said, the teams may need to stiffen it up so they can isolate the problem to find out what is happening and where, because the bouncing is absolutely causing havoc to the entire flow field.