The new Penske 8780 shock is five way adjustable. What would the five adjustments be?
Brian
1) This is the same mechanical style inerter that we have discussed before? It is now compact enough to be added to the internals of a large body shock.DaveW wrote:adding an integral inerter replaces the rebound adjuster (perhaps that would be the H variant?).
Yes & yes. To be fair, with an unknown vehicle, I would choose a rebound adjuster over an inerter, but perhaps one of the configurations of the 8780 overcomes that limitation.hardingfv32 wrote:This is the same mechanical style inerter that we have discussed before? It is now compact enough to be added to the internals of a large body shock.
Yes, several & kind of. It is two seasons since one team used them to win a series championship - don't ask...hardingfv32 wrote:Have you actually worked on a system with an inerter? Is the user friendly for an suspension expert?
In a good damper (with a correctly sized & loaded reservoir) the gas spring force of a non-through rod damper should constant, and equal to the charge pressure multiplied by the rod area. It acts exactly like preloading a spring, and has (or should have) no impact on the dynamic behaviour on the suspension.GSpeedR wrote:Dave, do you have idea of how the in-damper inerter is configured? I wonder if the resultant inerter forces are in series with the 'normal' damper forces or with the gas spring force(?).