Those who watched practice on Speed saw this video of the push rod flexing..
click photo
On top of everything else, would not having this kind of feedback be very fatigued to the driver?
I suspect that the frequency is in phase with the kerbing inputs (the natural frequency of the suspension links should be in the hundreds of Hz).Tim.Wright wrote:Looks to me like its vibrating at a natural frequency rather than being just plain to compliant. Its a problem that is not so easy to spot in the design phase.
To get any significant change in push-rod length it has to buckle, so the observed motion is the signature of a change in length, I believe. Pure compressive buckling is non-linear & usually terminal, with implies a bending moment applied to the push rod, which, in turn will make the load/deflection curve (more) linear.Tim.Wright wrote:Not sure if this would cause a change in the effective wheel stiffness or not. The vibrations are not pointing in the same direction as the load, so perhaps its not causing many handling problems.
What I did was: Right click on the link, select "Save Link As", then play the saved .mpg with VLC (a free media player).mep wrote:Somehow I don't see anything when i click on the photo.
And that illustrates one of the major issues I have with testing by simulator...Lycoming wrote:I would think that the objective of pushrod design would be to have it stiff enough that its deflection is negligible. If I was writing a simulator, I wouldn't have bothered coding it in.
Thanks Dave, that worked for me. I had this issue before and had forgotten the fix.DaveW wrote:What I did was: Right click on the link, select "Save Link As", then play the saved .mpg with VLC (a free media player).mep wrote:Somehow I don't see anything when i click on the photo.
a persistent train of perturbations at/near (the right) sub-harmonic of the natural frequency would do that ? (ie rumble curbing)DaveW wrote:I suspect that the frequency is in phase with the kerbing inputs (the natural frequency of the suspension links should be in the hundreds of Hz).Tim.Wright wrote:Looks to me like its vibrating at a natural frequency rather than being just plain to compliant. Its a problem that is not so easy to spot in the design phase.