I was not sure the other day of the effect of the ARB's.
I know that it mean that it tries to make the left and right wheels make the some movement up-and-down.
When the left goes up, but the right doesn't is will "fight" the upwards motion.
Like in corners, the outside wheels are pushed upwards (the car moves down), the inside wheels have sell weight and move down (car moves up). This action is made harder by the ARB's that resist that.
That's the physical work of one ARB's.
But the thing I'm struggling with is the front/rear effect.
(it wouldn't make sense, but just to give the extreme example)
What if I would only fit an ARB to the front and not to the back?
The fronts would stay more flat, the rear tires would have more effect of the weight shifting.
Would that result in more over or more understeer?
Could someone explain the logic behind the answer?
Thanks, Koen
I know that it mean that it tries to make the left and right wheels make the some movement up-and-down.
When the left goes up, but the right doesn't is will "fight" the upwards motion.
Like in corners, the outside wheels are pushed upwards (the car moves down), the inside wheels have sell weight and move down (car moves up). This action is made harder by the ARB's that resist that.
That's the physical work of one ARB's.
But the thing I'm struggling with is the front/rear effect.
(it wouldn't make sense, but just to give the extreme example)
What if I would only fit an ARB to the front and not to the back?
The fronts would stay more flat, the rear tires would have more effect of the weight shifting.
Would that result in more over or more understeer?
Could someone explain the logic behind the answer?
Thanks, Koen