tjakeman
Mechanical
- Oct 21, 2009
- 29
Hi Everyone. Firstly let me apologise for asking the same questions as many others will have done before me. I'm struggling a bit with lack of experience.
I'm designing the suspension for a light weight sports car:
700kg
300 bhp
front engine
rear drive
twin wishbone front
twin wishbone rear
14" wheels
It will be used both on the road and track but never for racing. I intend to use a performance (road legal track tire) such as Toyo R888/Yokohama A048 etc..
It will be possible to use a slightly wider tire on the rear (but the wheels will have the same rim width)
I have design freedom for all inboard suspension points front and rear, and so roll centre positions etc.
I have a CAD assembly of a front and rear corner and a Suspension kinematic model in WinGeo.
Where I'm struggling is to decide on inboard suspension positions without tire data. I understand that the influence of springs bars and tires are far more influential than subtle changes in my geometry, I'm just trying to make sure I have a good starting point. For now I've just included roll and ride iterations below:
The front suspension is a work in progress but at present gives very similar results to the rear in terms of camber gain and roll centre migration (ignoring the affect of caster and steer angle for now)
Shot at 2012-08-14
Questions:
Does this look sensible?
Should I try and decrease the positive camber of the outside tyre at full roll?
How much anti squat should I aim for? (at the moment there is none, I have a SAE paper suggesting 80-90% for a passenger car... )
How much roll axis inclination is sensible, at present my static roll centres are:
front Z - 38
rear Z - 50
I could probably get the front on the ground with some more work.
Thanks all for your help. I'd love to be about to move on from this stage soon and start building, just want to avoid dropping a clanger..
tom
I'm designing the suspension for a light weight sports car:
700kg
300 bhp
front engine
rear drive
twin wishbone front
twin wishbone rear
14" wheels
It will be used both on the road and track but never for racing. I intend to use a performance (road legal track tire) such as Toyo R888/Yokohama A048 etc..
It will be possible to use a slightly wider tire on the rear (but the wheels will have the same rim width)
I have design freedom for all inboard suspension points front and rear, and so roll centre positions etc.
I have a CAD assembly of a front and rear corner and a Suspension kinematic model in WinGeo.
Where I'm struggling is to decide on inboard suspension positions without tire data. I understand that the influence of springs bars and tires are far more influential than subtle changes in my geometry, I'm just trying to make sure I have a good starting point. For now I've just included roll and ride iterations below:
The front suspension is a work in progress but at present gives very similar results to the rear in terms of camber gain and roll centre migration (ignoring the affect of caster and steer angle for now)



Shot at 2012-08-14
Questions:
Does this look sensible?
Should I try and decrease the positive camber of the outside tyre at full roll?
How much anti squat should I aim for? (at the moment there is none, I have a SAE paper suggesting 80-90% for a passenger car... )
How much roll axis inclination is sensible, at present my static roll centres are:
front Z - 38
rear Z - 50
I could probably get the front on the ground with some more work.
Thanks all for your help. I'd love to be about to move on from this stage soon and start building, just want to avoid dropping a clanger..
tom