Talk:Active suspension

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Formula 1

Both Williams and Lotus experimented with active suspensions. In the times of the "inverted-wing" cars, the goal was to provide a constant ride height throughout a lap. See for example the 1987 Lotus 99T-Renault. Later, with the new "flat-bottom" regulation, Williams developed a true active suspension, with computer-controlled length of travel and speed of movement. See for example the 1992 Williams FW14B-Renault. Aldo L (talk) 06:41, 21 November 2010 (UTC)

Citröen Hydractive system

The Citröen Hydractive system was actually the first mass-produced intelligent system that controlled the two most important parameters in the elasticity of a suspension system: its length of travel and its speed of movement. Most semi-active systems only control the speed of movement via the setting of the shock absorbers, but do not change the setting of the springs. (The Xantia Activa's novel feature was a further development of the constant-height system introduced in 1955 by the DS, this time adding lateral control to the longitudinal control. This feature do not change the setting of the suspension in any manner, though the Xantia was also equipped with the Hydractive system.) Pondering these capabilities, all Citröen Hydractive systems would thus qualify as active systems. Aldo L (talk) 06:50, 21 November 2010 (UTC)

Years ago I read a piece in CAR magazine, authored by the late LJK Setright, which claimed that Citroen had a working system on a DS around 1959-60. I presume that cost and/or complexity in the pre-electronic era prevented it from reaching production. the same article mentioned AP testing a system later in the 1960s, installed in, of all things, a Hillman Hunter. Mr Larrington (talk) 14:25, 11 August 2011 (UTC)
Fully active systems allow the controller total authority over the motion of the wheels and body, to within the limits imposed by their masses. As you reduce the power and bandwidth of the actuators, fully active segues into semi-active, such as variable ride heights, and then adaptive type systems such as variable passive damping and variable stiffness sta bars are even lower on the scale. I am pretty sure that Rolls Royce got seriously interested in an active system based on citreon's technology, but so far as I know neither citreon nor RR ever got close to productionising a powerful active system. Marketing people and fanbois love to refer to 'active' suspensions, but they are rare beasts. Certainly most of the suspensions listed as active in this article are mislabelled. Since, of course, marketing people write the PR blurb, and journalists swallow it whole, and fanbois write wiki articles, inevitably the silly marketing claims end up as cited statements. Oh well, nobody dies as a result, it really doesn't matter much.Greglocock (talk) 07:26, 22 August 2012 (UTC)
To answer the question of Citroen getting involved with Rolls Royce and others, its hydropneumatic suspension was fitted on the Mercedes-Benz 6.9 L: http://www.classicandperformancecar.com/front_website/octane_interact/carspecs.php?see=3446 — Preceding unsigned comment added by 174.116.2.222 (talk) 00:00, 4 October 2012 (UTC)

Automotive Products

Automotive Products (AP) did a Rover 3500 (2000 bodyshell, V8) which was fully active - all suspension by hydraulic cylinders, back in about 1975. It handled like a 911! Absorbed a lot of power (>50 hp from memory) and never went into production. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 103.247.246.119 (talk) 09:41, 23 May 2013 (UTC)

Gosh, and yet by 1978 they had scrapped it unlike all the other Rover and Triumph protos which they kept. Or perhaps, more likely, it never existed. Greglocock (talk) 12:00, 23 May 2013 (UTC)
Was it a prototype by Rover (the vehicle manufacturer) or a prototype by AP (third party)? And of course, we need some form of documentation.  Stepho  talk  22:05, 23 May 2013 (UTC)
I apologise, it was an AP project Rover weren't directly involved. http://www.tonyfoale.com/Articles/Active/active.htm
Greglocock (talk) 06:16, 24 May 2013 (UTC)

Yes the AP Rover V8 with fully active suspension did exist,I drove it at Leyland in about 1975 or so. It cornered very flat, but so much power was absorbed it was slower than a standard 3500S through a chicane. By the way I think we should differentiate "Fully Active" where all suspension is hydraulic apart from compliance in tyres and rubber bushes, from "Semi Active" - control of gross body movements like dive and roll, but a passive suspension is series, from "Adaptive" - alteration of suspension parameter (damping, anti-roll bar stiffness etc.). Calling "Adaptive" by the name of "Semi-Active" is wrong! Sort of thing Marketing people do!JohnBegg (talk) 07:05, 20 December 2016 (UTC)

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Active vs. Passive unclear

Article is not clear on what 'Active Suspension' really is.

According to some dictionary definitions, it is narrow, that application of electric servos or motors married to electronic computing powered by Lotus in the 1980's. This was of course not possible earlier, only possible due to advances in technology.

If on the other hand, it is wide - anything not-passive is active, that would encompass earlier systems that also addressed 'Skyhook theory,' beginning with Hydropneumatic suspension. If 'active' is not a good description of the 'non-passive' catchall grouping, then we need to clarify. PLawrence99cx (talk) 17:35, 21 April 2017 (UTC)

In my mind I use the following rough definitions:
  • Passive is when you have a spring and shock absorber combination that always responds the same to every situation.
  • Semi active is when you can alter the spring rate or damping rate - eg sports mode vs normal mode.
  • Active is when a mechanism raises or lowers the wheel (eg hydraulic rams, electric motors).
Might have to tweak these definitions a bit to handle the original Mini's Hydrolastic suspension and the Citroen DS's Hydropneumatic suspension, both of which could be considered active suspension but neither has any electronics.  Stepho  talk  00:20, 22 April 2017 (UTC)stem or
There was no control system or power supply for Hydrolastic. it was interlinked, not active (I worked on it briefly). Greglocock (talk) 03:54, 22 April 2017 (UTC)
True, which is why I pointed out that my rough definitions fail in those two cases. Perhaps active suspension should include something about each actuated being independent of the others (which rules out the Mini and DS systems).
Anyway, we're getting off topic a bit. The real question is about semi-active (ie those that only change the spring and damper rates). I'm happy to leave them here. We just need to spell out the 3-way differences a bit clearer in the article instead of just splitting them into passive and active.  Stepho  talk  08:53, 22 April 2017 (UTC)

Proposal : Active/semi active

Since semi active suspension has its own article why not get rid of all the semi active details from this page? Greglocock (talk) 22:41, 21 April 2017 (UTC)

ah it is just a redirect to this article. forget it. Greglocock (talk) 22:42, 21 April 2017 (UTC)

The list of cars

Is variable ride height alone active suspension?

Skyhook

the list again

Air suspension systems?

1983 Soarer TEMS

Toyota TEMS and Active Suspension

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