tristancliffe
Automotive
- Jan 18, 2008
- 4
Hi
I am going to be racing a Dallara F3 car next year with a monoshock front suspension, using a belleville washer stack to supply some roll stiffness. I am hoping to calculate various things on the car to determine starting points for stack stiffnesses and spring rates etc.
1. Because the wheels are not independent, how does one go about calculating wheel rates for each corner? Do you assume the whole car is in pure bump, and simply use the motion ratio squared as per twin shock calculations?
2. The monoshock arrangement means that it isn't really anti-roll at all, but more like pro-roll with a stiffness... Because as one pushrod comes up (over a bump or through a corner) the other one is pushed down... So presumably the normal way of working out roll stiffness no longer applies?
Once I've figured out how to calculate both the above, I can combine them with calculations for the rear (twin shock with conventional torsion anti-roll bar) to get 'answers' like TLLTD, wheel frequency distributions and all of that (which of course aren't actually answers, merely suggestions that can be easily influenced to tell you what you want to be told... but that's not the point!)
Of course, the real world is complicated by the addition of preload and/or lock nuts on the belleville washers, preload and anti-droop on the coil (which I don't really understand the benefit of, but I guess it must be aero related), and of course damping. So much to learn when we start testing, but it would be nice to get an idea of how it's all going to work before it's close to being ready for the track.
I'd really appreciate your time to advise me if you can spare it.
Thanks, Tristan
I am going to be racing a Dallara F3 car next year with a monoshock front suspension, using a belleville washer stack to supply some roll stiffness. I am hoping to calculate various things on the car to determine starting points for stack stiffnesses and spring rates etc.
1. Because the wheels are not independent, how does one go about calculating wheel rates for each corner? Do you assume the whole car is in pure bump, and simply use the motion ratio squared as per twin shock calculations?
2. The monoshock arrangement means that it isn't really anti-roll at all, but more like pro-roll with a stiffness... Because as one pushrod comes up (over a bump or through a corner) the other one is pushed down... So presumably the normal way of working out roll stiffness no longer applies?
Once I've figured out how to calculate both the above, I can combine them with calculations for the rear (twin shock with conventional torsion anti-roll bar) to get 'answers' like TLLTD, wheel frequency distributions and all of that (which of course aren't actually answers, merely suggestions that can be easily influenced to tell you what you want to be told... but that's not the point!)
Of course, the real world is complicated by the addition of preload and/or lock nuts on the belleville washers, preload and anti-droop on the coil (which I don't really understand the benefit of, but I guess it must be aero related), and of course damping. So much to learn when we start testing, but it would be nice to get an idea of how it's all going to work before it's close to being ready for the track.
I'd really appreciate your time to advise me if you can spare it.
Thanks, Tristan