autogyro46
Electrical
- Sep 23, 2009
- 35
First, thanks to all who responded to this newbies very first thread last week.
Having set aside geometry for awhile, here's my next query.
I'm intrigued by the use of T-bar ARB's on some cars (there a beautiful pic of one on the Radical SR9). Nobody seems to talk much about this, but it's function with respect to the opposite wheel seems to be fundamentally different to the conventional U-bar.
Is the simplest terms, roll induced compression on the outside wheel is tranlated as a downward force on the inside wheel, rather than an upward force in the U-bar version.
Rotation torque is still referred to the chassis by the torsional compliance of the bar, although the bar is now 90 deg. from the the U-bar version.
The load transfer to the inside wheel would seem to be highly advantageous. Why isn't this used more..or at least talked about more?
As an aside, it seems to function much the same the oh-so-trendy "monoshock" configuration of a few years back, but without the potential binding and friction problems in that design.
Is there an Achilles heel that I'm missing here?
Having set aside geometry for awhile, here's my next query.
I'm intrigued by the use of T-bar ARB's on some cars (there a beautiful pic of one on the Radical SR9). Nobody seems to talk much about this, but it's function with respect to the opposite wheel seems to be fundamentally different to the conventional U-bar.
Is the simplest terms, roll induced compression on the outside wheel is tranlated as a downward force on the inside wheel, rather than an upward force in the U-bar version.
Rotation torque is still referred to the chassis by the torsional compliance of the bar, although the bar is now 90 deg. from the the U-bar version.
The load transfer to the inside wheel would seem to be highly advantageous. Why isn't this used more..or at least talked about more?
As an aside, it seems to function much the same the oh-so-trendy "monoshock" configuration of a few years back, but without the potential binding and friction problems in that design.
Is there an Achilles heel that I'm missing here?