science in suspension
morleyman200
Posts: 513
Im doing my A2 coursework, and decideed to do it about mountain bike suspension, prefereably air suspension, forks and shock, so if anyone knows the physics/science behind suspension platforms, some help would be most appreciated.
Tom
Tom
0
Comments
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So you want us to do your work?
What exactly do you mean by the science behind them!?0 -
It's VOODOO!
JCommencal Meta 55 Team custom build
Giant Trance 060 -
bails87 wrote:Read the technical manuals to try to figure out how everything fits together, and what does what.I don't do smileys.
There is no secret ingredient - Kung Fu Panda
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Parktools0 -
have a look in the tech links above for linkage."Do not follow where the path may lead, Go instead where there is no path, and Leave a Trail."
Parktools :?:SheldonBrown0 -
morleyman200 wrote:so if anyone knows the physics/science behind suspension platforms, some help would be most appreciated.
TomYou only need two tools: WD40 and Duck Tape.
If it doesn't move and should, use the WD40.
If it shouldn't move and does, use the tape.0 -
Daz555 wrote:morleyman200 wrote:so if anyone knows the physics/science behind suspension platforms, some help would be most appreciated.
Tom0 -
It's all different branches of physics:
- Hook's law for coil springs
- Gas pressure/volume/temperature equations for air springs
- Classical mechanics for levers
- Fluid dynamics for damping (good luck with this one by the way).
If you start there, the internet will be crawling with stuff which can help!0 -
It's all fairies.
There are little fairies in the air chamber (which is just so they don't suffocate- fairies rights and all...) and they fly up to push up on the bottom of the stanchions. When you hit a bump it increases the amount of force they're pushing against, and the time lag between that and them increasing the pressure differential as they flap their wings harder is what allows the fork to move. Bottom out is a load of cushions that protect the fairies when you over compress the fork, and when you over compress it too hard, it crushes the fairies at the bottom, which is how forks get damaged.
In the damping circuit you have more highly trained fairies who react faster and can control the rate at which the fork descends. Turning the compression and rebound damping is much like the 'all ahead/half ahead/ all stop' wheels on old timey ships, it lets them know what's going on outside. This is why budget companies can't do good damping- they haven't built up the necessary experience in fairy training and motivation.
Rear shocks work in much the same way, but the fairies are packed in much more tightly.Rock Lobster 853, Trek 1200 and a very old, tired and loved Apollo Javelin.0 -
That should have been brief. I think it's time to go to the pub.Rock Lobster 853, Trek 1200 and a very old, tired and loved Apollo Javelin.0
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Get your cad out, model a few of the popular suspension platforms. Always look good!0
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bike-a-swan wrote:It's all fairies.
There are little fairies in the air chamber (which is just so they don't suffocate- fairies rights and all...) and they fly up to push up on the bottom of the stanchions. When you hit a bump it increases the amount of force they're pushing against, and the time lag between that and them increasing the pressure differential as they flap their wings harder is what allows the fork to move. Bottom out is a load of cushions that protect the fairies when you over compress the fork, and when you over compress it too hard, it crushes the fairies at the bottom, which is how forks get damaged.
In the damping circuit you have more highly trained fairies who react faster and can control the rate at which the fork descends. Turning the compression and rebound damping is much like the 'all ahead/half ahead/ all stop' wheels on old timey ships, it lets them know what's going on outside. This is why budget companies can't do good damping- they haven't built up the necessary experience in fairy training and motivation.
Rear shocks work in much the same way, but the fairies are packed in much more tightly.0 -
pilsburypie wrote:bike-a-swan wrote:It's all fairies.
There are little fairies in the air chamber (which is just so they don't suffocate- fairies rights and all...) and they fly up to push up on the bottom of the stanchions. When you hit a bump it increases the amount of force they're pushing against, and the time lag between that and them increasing the pressure differential as they flap their wings harder is what allows the fork to move. Bottom out is a load of cushions that protect the fairies when you over compress the fork, and when you over compress it too hard, it crushes the fairies at the bottom, which is how forks get damaged.
In the damping circuit you have more highly trained fairies who react faster and can control the rate at which the fork descends. Turning the compression and rebound damping is much like the 'all ahead/half ahead/ all stop' wheels on old timey ships, it lets them know what's going on outside. This is why budget companies can't do good damping- they haven't built up the necessary experience in fairy training and motivation.
Rear shocks work in much the same way, but the fairies are packed in much more tightly.
That's only in BOS forks as they're French0 -
A2 is A-level for dummies, so you will not have to be advanced.
Just doing a comparison on how springs and air compresses would probably be enough.
You can mention how hydraulic damping works as an after thought (fluid sucked through holes limits speed, more advanced versions involve shims, but keep it simple).
A well explained simple idea will probably go down better than over complicating things.
If you need it to be long you might add in thermal effects.
compression of air/springs is work, things get hot.
pv=nrt for gas heating/compression.
the spring rate of air will change as it gets hotter (pretty negligible as it is off the baseline of 0k, but maybe enough for a bit of credit).
damping fluid gets energy out of the systems by converting to heat.
If you have any specific questions, or something you don't understand after reading up a lot feel free to PM.
The simple approach is that hundreds of people already have done this project, google is your friend.Why would I care about 150g of bike weight, I just ate 400g of cookies while reading this?0 -
ma+cv+kx
Look at control theory. free vibration, damped vibration.
Stiffness x Displacement = Spring Force
Damping x velocity = Damping Force (damping is considered linear for ease of cals, but in fact is v^2)
mass x acceleration = force
you're opening a big can of worms looking at air spring instead of mechanical spring. Mechanical spring is linear and the mechanics is straight forward.
With an air spring, you'll be getting into thermodynamics, a whole new area you will not have touched on.
Basically, you have chosen a far too big of a topic to do for A2, you'll get nothing out of it, no understanding, just skimming the surface.0 -
tomatoevousparlour wrote:cavegiant wrote:A2 is A-level for dummies, so you will not have to be advanced.
And A2 is ''proper'' A levels your thinking of AS being the Easy ones
Jon
These new fangled qualifications confusing me!
Much easier in my day, you just did a-levels.
As FBM says, keep it simple, you will not have enough time to cover more than a few points in detail.Why would I care about 150g of bike weight, I just ate 400g of cookies while reading this?0 -
go on, take these guys' advice, then you can be special like them. Or maybe consider that what you read on the internet may or may not be true, and that just possibly, someone is messing with you.
Then once you've done that, get your head down and do your own work, you cheating little scrote.0 -
cheating little scrote?
That is a bit harsh.
A key part of a research project is research.
His first step was contacting 'pillars of knowledge' aka forumers to see what areas he should be reading up on.
We didn't give him the answers, but gave him a few good ideas on what topics to look in to eg springs, fairies, damping.
I can't remember if you have to quote sources at A-level, but if he does, he should mention this as a stage of research.
I made a friking powerful crossbow for my a-level physics, it was fun.Why would I care about 150g of bike weight, I just ate 400g of cookies while reading this?0 -
thanks cave giant, most appreciated. and yea A2 is the hard part of A levels, AS is the easy bit
Im not asking anyone to do my work for me, im just asking for a few ideas and a little help into what would be worth while, i think ill concentrate on coil springs and then dampening systems as i can relate this to simple harmonic motion and critical dampening.0 -
Pah, i see your puny crossbow and raise you a railgun
We made a crossbow from a tractor leafspring, a construction girder and a chainblock when we were around 15, it was AWESOME! It shot scaffold poles through trees0 -
It's damping, by the way.
Unless you're talking about getting it wet, in which case dampening could be used, albeit somewhat incorrectly.
Oh, and this ' is an apostrophe - it fits neatly into such classic favourites as I'll and I'm.
Good grief, I learned this when I was in middle school; surely people taking A-Levels should know this? Oh, that's right, everyone's dyslexic these days...::'11 Pitch Pro::0 -
yeehaamcgee wrote:Pah, i see your puny crossbow and raise you a railgun
We made a crossbow from a tractor leafspring, a construction girder and a chainblock when we were around 15, it was AWESOME! It shot scaffold poles through trees
Back on topic, is the OP trying to work out how the individual components (springs, arms and damping) works or how they make the bike respond, which is all about weight distribution and how spring and damper rates change it transiently and under pseudo steady states such as cornering and braking.
SimonCurrently riding a Whyte T130C, X0 drivetrain, Magura Trail brakes converted to mixed wheel size (homebuilt wheels) with 140mm Fox 34 Rhythm and RP23 suspension. 12.2Kg.0 -
@idiotdogbrain - grammar nazi, and you forgot to mention BIG letters.I don't do smileys.
There is no secret ingredient - Kung Fu Panda
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Parktools0 -
We never made firearms bit we did make a ball bearing machinegun from a jackhammer. Fun, but not much use apart from scaring cows
Made a few small explosives though, which we used to demolish old sheds or "remove" dry Stone walls, so my mate's dad could build more sheds!0 -
yeehaamcgee wrote:Pah, i see your puny crossbow and raise you a railgun
We made a crossbow from a tractor leafspring, a construction girder and a chainblock when we were around 15, it was AWESOME! It shot scaffold poles through trees
My crossbow has been humbled.Why would I care about 150g of bike weight, I just ate 400g of cookies while reading this?0 -
yeehaamcgee wrote:Made a few small explosives though, which we used to demolish old sheds or "remove" dry Stone walls, so my mate's dad could build more sheds!
SimonCurrently riding a Whyte T130C, X0 drivetrain, Magura Trail brakes converted to mixed wheel size (homebuilt wheels) with 140mm Fox 34 Rhythm and RP23 suspension. 12.2Kg.0 -
Nitrogen triodide was always a fun one, more for practical jokes than demolition (far to dangerous to make more than a gram or two a go).
Same stuff that goes in those bangers that chavs throw at the ground, difference is the chavs are 0.1% NI3. You pour it on stuff when wet, then when it dries it is amusingly unstable. Very funny to pour on the floor. When someone steps on it the floor sets on fire =-)
Always wanted to make ammonium fulminate, but never had the balls...or had too much common sense depending on how you look at it.
Most of the explosives I made I used to 'upgrade' fireworks with.
Nothing like flaming metal shrapnel to brighten up your day.Why would I care about 150g of bike weight, I just ate 400g of cookies while reading this?0 -
cavegiant wrote:yeehaamcgee wrote:Pah, i see your puny crossbow and raise you a railgun
We made a crossbow from a tractor leafspring, a construction girder and a chainblock when we were around 15, it was AWESOME! It shot scaffold poles through trees
My crossbow has been humbled.
Oh, and for what it's worth, we used to use broken bulbs as detonators, hokked up to a car battery.0 -
I used firework detonators, cheap, easy and reliable.
I wanted stuff to be reliable!
I tried to make a two stage hyperbaric device while at uni too, but could never get the fuses correct. When I did the maths later on the energy release, I was quite lucky not to get it right.
My protective screen was a double glazed window 10 metres away, if the bomb had worked it would have taken a wall down.
If was fun to watch, mist of explosive goes up, then you cross your fingers for the second charge, mist lands/disapates, second charge goes.
Using your car battery to control the secondary would have been good (apart from I could have killed myself if it had worked).Why would I care about 150g of bike weight, I just ate 400g of cookies while reading this?0