etatv
Mechanical
- Jan 14, 2003
- 14
I just had this idea and wanted to bounce it off of you guys. Have any of you tried or had any experience with a split anti-roll bar. What I am thinking of is something like a standard anti-roll bar that has been split in 2 with a rotating coupling in the middle. The coupling would rotate a certain nuber of degrees before "locking" to two halves together. I know that some high end race equipment does this with a hydraulic chamber that links the shocks. I am trying to brainstorm a way to achieve the benefits of installing a larger anti-roll bar on a softly sprung "luxury" vehical with out adversly affecting the ride.
I'm thinking that the stops could be adjusted so that under normal one wheel bump conditions, the bar would be decoupled, and in a roll condition the bar would lock together and act like a normal anti-roll bar but with a higher rate than normal (due to larger size). This would eliminate the harsh one wheel bump ride that is normally associated with larger anti-roll bars.
Am I smoking something, or is this possible?
If it has been tried, were there issues with the sudden change in spring rate when the bar "locks-up"? Possibly there is a way to make the bar get progressivly stiffer as it twists.
Thanks
Ed
I'm thinking that the stops could be adjusted so that under normal one wheel bump conditions, the bar would be decoupled, and in a roll condition the bar would lock together and act like a normal anti-roll bar but with a higher rate than normal (due to larger size). This would eliminate the harsh one wheel bump ride that is normally associated with larger anti-roll bars.
Am I smoking something, or is this possible?
If it has been tried, were there issues with the sudden change in spring rate when the bar "locks-up"? Possibly there is a way to make the bar get progressivly stiffer as it twists.
Thanks
Ed