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Re: alfa-digest V9 #598



There's essentially nothing wrong wit leaf springs on independent suspensions at either end of the car if they are designed properly. Some early Ferraris used a transverse leaf spring on their front suspension as did a number of lesser cars. Most notably, if memory serves, was the Opel GT, the 'mini-Corvette' of the early 1970's.

George Graves
'86 GTV-6 3.0S



On Monday, June 23, 2003, at 05:52 AM, alfa-digest wrote:



Date: Sun, 22 Jun 2003 21:57:11 -0500
From: "Ellen K. Wilkinson" <wilk@domain.elided>
Subject: Re: Swing axles

Actually, the advantage of transverse springs and similar devices (camber
compensators, z-bars, Helwig stabilizers) on swing axle rear suspensions is
REDUCTION in roll stiffness compared to springs at each wheel. The idea is
to prevent weight jacking by shifting as much roll stiffness (and thus
unloading of the inside wheel) as possihle to the front. Some of the
Formula Vee cars had zero rear roll stiffness--a single coil in the middle
or a pivoting (on the transaxle) leaf. Were it not for the front wheels,
the car would simply flop over on its side with any lateral force applied
to the CG.

Bob Wilkinson
72 Spider

Michael Smith wrote:

Finally, another interesting characteristic of the transverse leaf spring
is built in anti roll stiffness. The Corvette used a single leaf transverse
spring in their irs, and I even think it was fiberglass. The Corvette, of
course, has essentially the same rear suspension as Jaguars of the same
era, except for the leaf instead of coilovers.
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