- Banned
- #61
The resistance to motion is definitely real, don't get me wrong.On the term bind, well, if I take out the spring, shock and disconnect the swaybar, and it takes 100+ lbs of force to barely move the control arm, that's bound up!! It may be 'causal' but it is real. What would you call a spherical bearing or a sleeved bushing that had degraded enough (crudded up with dirt/corrosion/dust etc) to where it can move, but doesn't do so without excessive force? I'd call it bind. There is no one designing a suspension anywhere that would choose that without it being forced on them.
It's important to know of this resistance is the purposeful deflection of a suspension component or friction due to the incorrect use of a suspension feature. In the best case scenario, I see rubber bushings as a flexure type of suspension joint. These are _definitely_ done on purpose (at the highest level of motorsport, no less) and they're done to remove friction from the suspension. They do, however, introduce additional spring rate. Your example of a cruddy spherical would introduce a bunch of friction into the system, as opposed to spring rate. That produces a significantly different effect in terms of contact patch load variation and performance on track.
I agree that a spherical which needs replacing would be 'bound up' as well as my over-travel example from earlier.
And you're right, I can see the bean-counter and NVH department being very pleased with the big bushing as opposed to a more expensive articulated joint.
Sponsored
