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5-link B4
2 Attachment(s)
:wub
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Very cool.
How is the shock mounted at the bottom? and also is this just to give it infinate toe in adjustment? |
awesome!
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multi-link_suspension
I've never really understood the benefits and not sure I'm any the wiser from the above article. Does look nice though! |
That is awsome!
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Did you not hear me talking to Tom about this at the weekend? ;)
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I would be worried about poping one of the 28 ballstuds off.
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B4 Avante stylee, looks pretty cool.
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No, well not that I remember. I remember the quiz qeuestion though ;)
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cool idea but how will that look with the bodyshell on :lol:
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It seems to be crash-proof as well. But I'm no expert in that matter... |
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Only 22 for the rear suspension :p 32 for the whole car... |
Its an impressive piece of work.
But don't take offense, I can't see the point, yet. Have you done it for performance or for own curiosity? |
I think its a car only him or Jim Dixon will ever understand fully :woot:
It does look good tho. As Chris says, what's the theory behind it other than infinitely adjustable? |
good idea but looks over complicated to get it setup right
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If I understood the wikipedia-article correctly, it is quite easy to tune a car with this kind of suspension, as changing one aspect of the tuning, doesn't affect other aspects.
Also, camber and caster are much more stable. When a car lands from a jump, or rolls in a corner, with a conventional suspension the camber-angle will change, but not with this type of suspension, so it is much more consistant and the suspension can move more freely. http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...link3Dtop1.gif (source: wikipedia) On this picture you can see that movement of the wheel does not affect the angles. Drawside is the more complex build ... and you have more parts to maintain, or that can fail. ... and according to the wikipedia-article, a swaybar is needed to control (slow down) the chassis rolling. ... So all Elvo has to do now, after testing this suspension, is building it also into his S2. Next thing you know, conversion kits are sold lol |
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For both! The point is this: I've always found anti-squat to be a huge compromise. Very little anti-squat is good for accellerating through bumps and sideways traction, but lots of antisquat is good for absorbing bumps off-power, and on-power traction. And it's a fixed value; you set it, and you're stuck with it. With a 5-link suspension, the two forward links allow the same kind of flexibility and tunability for anti-squat as you have now for roll centre, it's almost limitless. Anti-squat varies throughout wheel travel. That, and you can make the rear wheels move back in bump. I've always wanted to test that, but with A-arms, you'd have to use a massive amount of anti-squat (like the AERO, possibly more), but then the shocks don't work properly anymore... |
Is there a name for each link so they can be identified?
if the two on each side (drag link upper and lower?) are unequal length, then that would mean antisquat could increase or decrease through suspension travel, same as if the 2 links were not mounted parallel. Then with the lower two wishbone links on each side, if these are unequal in length, or not mounted parallel, then the toe in will increase or decrease through suspension travel. Then the top link, we all know what that does, camber change through suspension travel. Then beyond that, with the movement of one factor, means other tie rods are twisting and so other factors become changeable through suspension travel even if not intended to be. But with all this, id be completely lost. On paper it may mean a perfect setup can be acheived, but do we live long enough to find it practically? :lol: Seriously though. On that animated picture above, links don't look to remain static in length through the animation, or is that just me? Will you be running something like this at Belgium? I am intrigued by this, and impressed with your engineering and bravery mate. Chris |
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wouldnt mind seeing a bit more, with the wheels off ;)
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