I’ve read some interesting threads on damping and shaker rigs and this got me thinking about damper set up and performance analysis where budgets simply can’t stretch to proper shaker rig work.
I know that when I’ve really put some thought into the damping, spent some time on the dyno/revalving, done datalogged testing and then been able (or lucky enough) to get the damping really well set, the improvements in performance have been significant.
So for me setting dampers initially with respect to critical damping on the dyno, logging on track and reviewing as raw displacement data in the time domain, damper velocity histograms and in the frequency domain gives a fairly well-rounded look at things with a pretty small budget.
I’m really interested in the merit of building a single wheel “dyno” or ¼ car shaker rig to look at the complete “tyre-suspended mass-spring/damper” system of just one corner (clearly this would involve doing front and rear). My thought is that if I can go through this process and identify any resonance issues before track testing that’s considerable time saved.
I was thinking of a scotch yoke thing putting in say 10mm amplitude and going from say 1 to 15hz with a load cell between the input and the tyre. So it would record tyre contact patch load, position and also damper displacement (pot on the damper). Its not too hard then to do a wealth of analysis with this raw data.
I do realise this only gives a constant amplitude for all frequencies and cannot factor in proper heave, roll or pitch but it is worth it for say the look at high speed damping alone?
I’d be really interested in any experiences, thoughts and opinions. I know there’s a wealth of knowledge on this forum!