tristancliffe
Automotive
- Jan 18, 2008
- 4
Hi,
I have been running a 1988 F3 car in a UK based championship for the last year (Monoposto), and have been trying to climb the steep learning curve. One thing has caused a lot of confusion, and I've not really been able to find or deduce real answers:
Spring Preload!
Our car uses rising rate (rocker) inboard suspension with pushrods.
People in the paddock have said that increasing preload effectively increases the spring rate, but I don't beleive it does, assuming the car is running off the dampers' internal rebound stops.
As far as I can tell increasing spring preload only increases the ride height, limits rebound/droop travel, and increases available bump travel. With the rising rate more preload (and correcting the ride height via pushrod lengths) moves the rockers so that wheel rate actually DECREASES - completely the opposite of what I'm told by the fast guys.
And then, to throw a spanner in the works, I'm told that some cars (often FFords) use lots of preload to give zero droop suspension to limit understeer out of corners - but I don't understand how that works either - surely limiting the droop will REDUCE tyre load, and therefore INCREASE understeer, unless it's achieving more tyre load by limiting CoG movement and hence load transfer.
I've visited this forum as a guest for a while on and off, and it struck me that I'm more likely to get sensible answer (perhaps with a bit of theory) here than almost anywhere else.
Can you help? I can supply more (generic) information if required to set the scene a bit if it helps.
Thanks,
Tristan
I have been running a 1988 F3 car in a UK based championship for the last year (Monoposto), and have been trying to climb the steep learning curve. One thing has caused a lot of confusion, and I've not really been able to find or deduce real answers:
Spring Preload!
Our car uses rising rate (rocker) inboard suspension with pushrods.
People in the paddock have said that increasing preload effectively increases the spring rate, but I don't beleive it does, assuming the car is running off the dampers' internal rebound stops.
As far as I can tell increasing spring preload only increases the ride height, limits rebound/droop travel, and increases available bump travel. With the rising rate more preload (and correcting the ride height via pushrod lengths) moves the rockers so that wheel rate actually DECREASES - completely the opposite of what I'm told by the fast guys.
And then, to throw a spanner in the works, I'm told that some cars (often FFords) use lots of preload to give zero droop suspension to limit understeer out of corners - but I don't understand how that works either - surely limiting the droop will REDUCE tyre load, and therefore INCREASE understeer, unless it's achieving more tyre load by limiting CoG movement and hence load transfer.
I've visited this forum as a guest for a while on and off, and it struck me that I'm more likely to get sensible answer (perhaps with a bit of theory) here than almost anywhere else.
Can you help? I can supply more (generic) information if required to set the scene a bit if it helps.
Thanks,
Tristan