Un-sprung Mass
Author
Discussion

lankybob

Original Poster:

2,076 posts

212 months

Saturday 4th December 2010
quotequote all
Can someone please explain the physics behind reducing un-sprung mass making a car better at tackling corners and such.
I have heard many stories about trying to keep these masses down to improve a cars feel and performance when driving and I just wondered why this happened.

I think this is the correct section to put this question in as it is about cars and driving.

Cheers,
Bob

PhillipM

6,537 posts

211 months

Saturday 4th December 2010
quotequote all
The easiest terms I can put it in is that the unsprung mass is held against the road by the sprung mass, so the lighter the unsprung mass, and the heavier the sprung mass, the more the wheel will track against the road rather than lifting the body up, and the faster the body can push the wheel back down after a bump.
It's like an 8 stone skinny lad trying to lift a sumo wrestler vs the other way around.

It's a bit more involved and I've not explained it very well, but I'm just on my way so it'll have to wait.

Edited by PhillipM on Saturday 4th December 15:34

Eggman

1,253 posts

233 months

Saturday 4th December 2010
quotequote all
Imagine waving your hand around empty, then doing the same thing holding a tin of beans. Which is easier?

Now think of your hand as the roadwheel and your arm as the suspension spring & shock absorber. Make sense now?

flemke

23,380 posts

259 months

Saturday 4th December 2010
quotequote all
Think in terms of the tyre-wheel unit itself, although that is just part of the UM.
As the vehicle moves, the discontinuities in the road surface will cause the tyre to move up and down. The higher the speed, the greater the movement. As it moves up and down, the tyre will not stay in perfect interface ("contact patch") with the road surface. Whenever that contact patch is compromised, grip is compromised.
The heavier the wheel, the more difficult it will be for the damper to control the movement of that tyre, and the worse the compromises in the contact patch will become. Reducing UM reduces the difficulty that the damper has in keeping that contact patch in its ideal size and shape.

RobM77

35,349 posts

256 months

Saturday 4th December 2010
quotequote all
Eggman said:
Imagine waving your hand around empty, then doing the same thing holding a tin of beans. Which is easier?

Now think of your hand as the roadwheel and your arm as the suspension spring & shock absorber. Make sense now?
I like that analogy smile

anonymous-user

76 months

Saturday 4th December 2010
quotequote all
Eggman said:
Imagine waving your hand around empty, then doing the same thing holding a tin of beans. Which is easier?
Then imagine the effect on your car when you make it more "sporty" by fitting bigger wheels, bigger tyres, bigger brake discs and bigger calipers....

lankybob

Original Poster:

2,076 posts

212 months

Saturday 4th December 2010
quotequote all
Thank you for the replies chaps, it clears up something that I really should have know.

Cheers,
Bob

AnotherClarkey

3,698 posts

211 months

Saturday 4th December 2010
quotequote all
5 USA said:
Eggman said:
Imagine waving your hand around empty, then doing the same thing holding a tin of beans. Which is easier?
Then imagine the effect on your car when you make it more "sporty" by fitting bigger wheels, bigger tyres, bigger brake discs and bigger calipers....
Isn't it also the case that many 'light' alloy wheels are now heavier than pressed steel?

Mermaid

21,492 posts

193 months

Saturday 4th December 2010
quotequote all
AnotherClarkey said:
5 USA said:
Eggman said:
Imagine waving your hand around empty, then doing the same thing holding a tin of beans. Which is easier?
Then imagine the effect on your car when you make it more "sporty" by fitting bigger wheels, bigger tyres, bigger brake discs and bigger calipers....
Isn't it also the case that many 'light' alloy wheels are now heavier than pressed steel?
also because wheel and tyre sizes are much larger.

flemke

23,380 posts

259 months

Saturday 4th December 2010
quotequote all
5 USA said:
Eggman said:
Imagine waving your hand around empty, then doing the same thing holding a tin of beans. Which is easier?
Then imagine the effect on your car when you make it more "sporty" by fitting bigger wheels, bigger tyres, bigger brake discs and bigger calipers....
In fairness, those things are not necessarily fitted simply to look good. Sometimes they are, but not always. Also, damping technology has come far since the days of this:

Eggman

1,253 posts

233 months

Saturday 4th December 2010
quotequote all
That's a shapely-looking lever arm.

Sam_68

9,939 posts

267 months

Saturday 4th December 2010
quotequote all
flemke said:
Also, damping technology has come far...
On the other hand, even the most perfect damper in the world would still have to arrest the momentum of the unsprung mass by transmitting that force to the chassis in something close to one cycle of the suspension deflection.

No matter how good your dampers are, unsprung mass will always be a bad thing in terms of both ride quality and grip.

Wheels, tyres, and brakes should be as big (and as heavy) as they need to be, and no more.


flemke

23,380 posts

259 months

Saturday 4th December 2010
quotequote all
Sam_68 said:
flemke said:
Also, damping technology has come far...
On the other hand, even the most perfect damper in the world would still have to arrest the momentum of the unsprung mass by transmitting that force to the chassis in something close to one cycle of the suspension deflection.

No matter how good your dampers are, unsprung mass will always be a bad thing in terms of both ride quality and grip.

Wheels, tyres, and brakes should be as big (and as heavy) as they need to be, and no more.
Of course, you'd always rather have less UM, and the effective savings in relation to same actual reduction in SM is several times as great.
As has been pointed out wrt to query about whether pressed steel can result in a lighter wheel than cast/forged ally might do, however, there are many factors that go into optimising the package, and in practice UM will never be as light as it could possibly be.

anonymous-user

76 months

Sunday 5th December 2010
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flemke said:
in practice UM will never be as light as it could possibly be.
Particularly since "inboard disc brakes" have gone notably out of fashion, perhaps due to a combination of cooling and styling issues. And the sheer size of modern brakes - which brings us back where we started!