Jump to content


Photo
- - - - -

Suspension innovation from Ferrari


  • Please log in to reply
1 reply to this topic

#1 Gerald Ryan

Gerald Ryan
  • Member

  • 66 posts
  • Joined: December 06

Posted Yesterday, 00:59

Some years back I saw an article about innovations Ferrari had either produced for road cars, raced on the track or designed but did not use (perhaps they tried a few out but decided not to go ahead with them). One of the ideas related to a modified form of double a-arm suspension. The idea seems to have been to provide a linkage which mimicked the deployment of long a-arms (allowing more compact packaging so as to fit the space available). Now I'm thinking back to something I saw in passing and it was a long time ago. I think it was the lower a-arm which was replaced by an arrangement similar to a single sided Watts link mechanism. I'm guessing that would have been to make the lower linkage assembly behave like a long a-arm. Does anyone recall anything like this?  



Advertisement

#2 Greg Locock

Greg Locock
  • Member

  • 6,459 posts
  • Joined: March 03

Posted Yesterday, 05:31

You could do it with a 4 bar linkage, to give say a straight , vertical, path for the outer ball joint in bump (ie an infinite length arm). There are many configurations of 4 bar links that give shorter or longer bits of straight travel, as you suggest including the watts link

 

Here's somebody's thesis, I bet he is fun at parties. https://repository.r...&context=theses

 

And here's all sorts of more or less practical solutions, the Chebyshev looks like the one I'd concentrate on if somebody else was paying

 

https://en.wikipedia...-line_mechanism


Edited by Greg Locock, Yesterday, 05:38.