I read a race chassis design book one time, the advice was something like any suspension corner should be able to take 10g's of the car's weight. Car weights 1 lb? any wheel should be able to take 10 lb, can't remember all the specifics.
this is all IIRC
Also, in racing it's possible to go airborne and have one wheel land first, unlikely but possible in mall crawlers.
Also, in racing, it is not unheard of for a car to have half it's weight in downforce, Although I don't know I suspect some cars have more than that.
I think this book was race car handling & chassis design. Worth a read I suppose.
I think another aspect to consider is, and perhaps even the most important, how will a component fail?
Ball joints should have the ball pressing into the socket, not the other way around. Wan't to know why?
Also please tell me your definition of structural vs. non structural. Almost everything in cars can be considered structural in the event of a crash, for example, or a roof with an aftermarket rack installed. Even a hood is part of the crumple zone.
Also in the event of a crash some components are designed to fail a certain way. That is to say that you need to know how much force a component can take under all operating conditions and design for that, and know how much it will take in a serious crash, and design it to fail at that point.
I think I remember engine mounts being designed in such a way as to drop the block.
IIRC The dodge challenger (is this based on the charger?) was poorly designed so that when the suspension failed, the wheels swung into the passenger compartment, breaking their legs.
Link
If you design stuff I want to see your front wheel pop off like the Camero in the above video.
Engineering student. Electrical or mechanical, I can't decide!
Minoring in psychology