The semi hidden spring in the roll element is (probably) there to simply apply a preload to the other exposed coil spring in order to make the roll element work in both tension and compression. Coil springs, when seated between 2 perches, only work in compression. In tension they lose contact with the perch and fall off their seat. This behaviour is fine for the heave element which only ever sees compression loads. But in roll, this particular element looks to be in compression when the body rolls to the left and tension when it rolls to the right.roon wrote: ↑02 Jun 2017, 17:44The lower half of the roll element has a rigid housing that is attached to the right-hand side bellcrank, yet it houses a spring internally. That spring must be actuated internally via a hydraulic piston.
What's the precedent for using heave & roll elements only in a suspension design? Why is there a (seemingly) remotely actuated spring within the lower half of the roll element?
To keep the exposed spring from falling off it's seat it looks like they have used a through rod damper (to avoid damper gas preload from giving an asymmetrical roll stiffness) and then an opposing spring where the rod exits the damper body on the other side. The "cage" structure goes around this second spring to connect the damper body to the other rocker arm. So I don't think that other spring is remotely actuated. There doesn't seem to be any interconnection points (either hydraulic or mechanical) on these dampers so at lease on the show car it doesn't look to have a FRIC system.