Hi All,Im a newb to the site ,cant see the newb intro area ,so thought I would dive straight in here....Apologies if this isnt the site etiquet!
Ive just completed and MSVA'd a new build Reliant engined trike with tube frame etc,but am now thinking I would like to build a 2 seater reverse
trike .Im only at the toe dipping stage at the moment. I read with interest a few of the posts on here regarding CofG . I believe below G.L. is best
according to the info on here. How do I work this out please?
Thanks
quote:
I believe below G.L. is best
lol! Ground Level
think you mean roll centre re below ground level, i cant see how centre of mass can be below ground when all the mass is above ground!
Basically, CoG wants to be low, and in a reverse trike, id imagine quite forwards for stability.
Yes,sorry,I got the two things mixed up!
With regard to roll centre calculation, this diagram may be of assistance. HTH Ray
[img]
Roll centre diag
[/img]
quote:
Originally posted by Chippy
With regard to roll centre calculation, this diagram may be of assistance. HTH Ray
[img]
Roll centre diag [/img]
Ermmm! whats to explain, thought the diagram was self explanatory. Cheers Ray
quote:
Originally posted by daviep
quote:
Originally posted by Chippy
With regard to roll centre calculation, this diagram may be of assistance. HTH Ray
[img]
Roll centre diag [/img]
Can you explain for me please
quote:
Originally posted by Chippy
Ermmm! whats to explain, thought the diagram was self explanatory. Cheers Ray
Just to add a bit of info, on a 4 wheel vehicle if the roll centre is below GL ground level then the car is more inclined to slip sideways.
It was always considered best to have the roll center a little above ground even at full suspension compression.
Well that's what I was told.
Chippy and speedstar,thanks for the info
[Edited on 30/12/11 by Rodeo]
[Edited on 30/12/11 by Rodeo]
quote:
Originally posted by speedstar
quote:
Originally posted by daviep
quote:
Originally posted by Chippy
With regard to roll centre calculation, this diagram may be of assistance. HTH Ray
[img]
Roll centre diag [/img]
Can you explain for me please
Take a line from each of the wishbones straight out to the side of the car. They SHOULDN'T be parallel (thats bad) and this means they will intersect.
From the point they intersect, draw another line to the contact patch of the tyre.
Repeat for the opposite side. Where the two contact patch lines cross is your roll centre.
And it IS possible to have a roll centre below ground level, if your wishbone line intersection point is below ground level. You need really funky set up wishbones for this, and am yet to understand its advantages but some old school single seaters ran that.
Regarding CofG, an IDEAL situation would be to have it at exactly that same point as your roll centre. This means you get zero roll. This has other repercussions which can be detrimental (its never easy, is it?). If your CofG is i]below your roll centre, the car will actually roll the opposite way you would expect (weight transfer stays the same though).
Happy planning
quote:
Originally posted by Halemini
Ah 3 wheelers! Sorry Speedstar, This is very close to my heart, so I must disagree here! The reason Morgans were so successful was because of their stability and speed! This comes from parallel cross tubes and sliding pillar front suspension!
Dc
quote:
Originally posted by speedstar
quote:
Originally posted by daviep
quote:
Originally posted by Chippy
With regard to roll centre calculation, this diagram may be of assistance. HTH Ray
[img]
Roll centre diag [/img]
Can you explain for me please
Take a line from each of the wishbones straight out to the side of the car. They SHOULDN'T be parallel (thats bad) and this means they will intersect.
From the point they intersect, draw another line to the contact patch of the tyre.
Repeat for the opposite side. Where the two contact patch lines cross is your roll centre.
And it IS possible to have a roll centre below ground level, if your wishbone line intersection point is below ground level. You need really funky set up wishbones for this, and am yet to understand its advantages but some old school single seaters ran that.
Regarding CofG, an IDEAL situation would be to have it at exactly that same point as your roll centre. This means you get zero roll. This has other repercussions which can be detrimental (its never easy, is it?). If your CofG is i]below your roll centre, the car will actually roll the opposite way you would expect (weight transfer stays the same though).
Happy planning
Found this interesting article which may be of assistance?
3 wheel stability article
quote:
Originally posted by Halemini
Ah 3 wheelers! Sorry Speedstar, This is very close to my heart, so I must disagree here! The reason Morgans were so successful was because of their stability and speed! This comes from parallel cross tubes and sliding pillar front suspension!
Dc
quote:
Originally posted by speedstar
And it IS possible to have a roll centre below ground level, if your wishbone line intersection point is below ground level. You need really funky set up wishbones for this, and am yet to understand its advantages but some old school single seaters ran that.
Happy planning
Er theoreticaly if the roll centre is above the CofG the car will lift an outside wheel. Is that possible?
I do have a serious question Chippy. The diagram says choose the height of your roll centre. (By using your diagram and adjusting the geo of the
wishbones I can see how you do this) But How do you choose a roll centre. Whats the ideal height for the front roll centre in a sevenesque car?
quote:
Originally posted by Dusty
Er theoreticaly if the roll centre is above the CofG the car will lift an outside wheel. Is that possible?
I do have a serious question Chippy. The diagram says choose the height of your roll centre. (By using your diagram and adjusting the geo of the wishbones I can see how you do this) But How do you choose a roll centre. Whats the ideal height for the front roll centre in a sevenesque car?
quote:
Originally posted by Dusty
Er theoreticaly if the roll centre is above the CofG the car will lift an outside wheel. Is that possible?
I do have a serious question Chippy. The diagram says choose the height of your roll centre. (By using your diagram and adjusting the geo of the wishbones I can see how you do this) But How do you choose a roll centre. Whats the ideal height for the front roll centre in a sevenesque car?
quote:
Originally posted by Chippy I think though that generaly the sort of height used is 1" or 2" front and 3" or 4" rear, (rear should always be slightly higher than the front). HTH Ray
quote:
Originally posted by randombloke
There is no simple answer to roll centre height and in fact RCH is just a consequence of SAL and ride height. With the assumption that you have chosen your uprights and that their geometry is fixed the only way to change the RCH is changing the SAL and RH. Ride height changes the CofG, lower being better but lower effects ground clearance, SAL changes how dynamic geometry handles cornering versus bump and droop (See my post above). So it comes down to which compromise suits what you want from the car.
Ok, that's clearer on roll centre but chucking in swing arm lengths is a bit mean. No definitive answers to any of these questions? I take it
short medium and long all have their + and - points so I'm not going to ask that question.
Instead it looks as if the roll centre leaps up and down on suspension movement. What would you do to stop this? Having chosen where I want the little
bleeder I would like it to stay there. At least I think I would unless there is some advantage in having it move.
Would it be more helpful to put together a list of things you definitely don't want to do with suspension?
[Edited on 2/1/12 by Dusty]
Hi Dusty, well it's pretty much impossable to not have any movement of the RC, the trick is to try to get as little as possable. Using a long SAL is the easiest way to attain this, (reason for the length stated in my diagram), but you still need to play around with wishbone, WB, lengths to try to get the least movement. With mine I started with a lower WB of 18" and upper at 11", and after some experimentation ended up with 16" and 10", which gave me the least movement of the RC. Really if you want to get the full SP on suspension there are some very good books that go into it in detail, though some are very maths orientated, (not my strong suite), I found "Andre Jutes" book, "Building Special Cars", very informative, not only for suspension but the complete design of a car. Regards Ray
Hello Dusty sorry no definite answer to RC height but as for what stops it moving when you’re driving the answer is most definitely stiff springs!
The problem with roll centre is that it doesn't just move up and down but side to side as well. This is why the SAL is important. IMHO the roll
centre height isn’t important but keeping it from moving is.
My design process started with the things that I could define so I started with the wheel size, track width and chosen upright, with this I had the
location of the outer suspension connection points. Next I chose the ride height, my car is for road with very occasional track so I decided on 100mm
to keep it low but give reasonable clearance. Because I didn’t want to modify the steering rack from my donor the lower front chassis width was
dictated by the rack, so I now had the lower inner pickup points. I decided to go for a medium length SAL of 1700mm because I wanted to keep the outer
suspension geometry from gaining positive camber when cornering but also wanted the car to be stable in a straight line. Then all I had to do then was
draw a line from the IRC to the upper outer pickup point. With this geometry the RCH is about 75mm but I only bothered what the height was once I had
the rest of the geometry in place.
After drawing my design in Autodesk Inventor I needed tiny modification of wishbone length to stop the geometry gaining positive camber but now the
outside wheel is at zero camber whilst the chassis rolls to nearly 4 degrees.