Where The Graphs Come From
Where The Graphs Come From
Frame
Load Cell
Linear Bearing
Crank
Motor
BDC
BDC
00 Degrees
Degrees
Velocity ==00
Velocity
Mid Stroke
Compression
90 Degrees
Velocity = Max
TDC
180 Degrees
Velocity = 0
Mid Stroke
Rebound
270 Degrees
Velocity = Max
Figure 1
Shock Dynamometer
We all know that the speed of a piston connected to a crank varies continuously
as the crank rotates. You might remember from high school math or physics that
this type of motion is called sinusoidal because it varies with the sine of the crank
angle. The piston comes to a stop at bottom dead center (BDC), accelerates to
a maximum speed halfway up the cylinder, and slows down to a stop again at
the top (TDC). If you have a damper attached to a crank, its piston does the
same, and the force generated also varies continuously. We know, however,
that the maximum speed of the piston happens only once per stroke, when the
piston is halfway between top and bottom, and thats also when the damper
generates maximum force. With our simple shock dyno we could change the
crank stroke to vary the maximum shaft speed and/or we could use drive pulleys
of different sizes. However both of these methods are cumbersome and time
consuming during testing. Variable speed AC motors allow easy manipulation of
the crank RPM.
Some dampers are set up to give more force in rebound than compression so,
as our simple machine cranks away; we might see the scale peak at 190 pounds
in compression and 250 pounds in rebound. So we know that, at a shaft speed
of 5 inches per second, the damper produces 190 pounds in compression (or
bump) and 250 pounds in rebound. Wed like several data points so we can
draw a curve. If we reduce the crank speed to 50 RPM, and 25 RPM, and also
speed it up to 150, and 200 RPM, this gives us five data points. After we make
these runs and read the scale we can make a table like this:
CRANK
RPM
25
50
100
150
200
MAX SPEED
IN/SEC
1.3
2.6
5.2
7.8
10.4
BUMP FORCE
LBS
75
170
190
220
250
REBOUND FORCE
LBS
50
150
250
350
470
Chart 1
Presented as a force vs. shaft speed graph, it looks like Figure 2. We generated
this data by running the crank at a 1.0 stroke and changing the crank RPM to
give us 5 maximum piston speeds, and we read the bump and rebound forces at
those maximum speeds. Then we made a graph by connecting the dots. If we
want data at higher shaft speeds we need to speed up the crank or lengthen the
stroke. Figure 2 shows us that the shock we tested has a pretty steep rebound
curve while the compression curve starts low, rises quickly, and then levels off.
The real benefit of a machine like this comes when you test all four dampers off
your race car and find out that they all give different readings even though they
are supposed to have the same valving, and youve, hopefully, set them all to the
same external adjustments before you started the test. Some small difference in
readings is OK, but the closer together the better. If youve got the tools and
experience, you can overhaul your shocks and test them again. Maybe youll find
contaminated oil, bad seals, or worn parts. Shocks wear out like any other
mechanism and need to be rebuilt periodically.
500
400
Force (pounds)
300
200
100
0
-100 0
10
-200
-300
-400
-500
Velocity (ips)
Figure 2
A shock dyno also allows you to see the effects of external adjustments. If the
data above represents settings in the middle of the range of adjustments, varying
them in increments from full-hard to full-soft will give you curves that show the
effect of those changes. That will happen if your dampers produce changes big
enough to be seen by your machine. If you really are just reading a scale by eye
you might miss some fine points. Thats why people buy dynos instead of
building them
Figure 2 above came from data generated by looking at maximum or peak
velocities. This is called Peak Velocity Pickoff, and thats the way a simple dyno
works. We varied crank speed and the damper stroke to give us peak velocities
in our range of interest.
500
Mid Stroke
90 Degrees
Peak Compression Velocity 375
250
125
0
-10
-5
BDC 0
Degrees
-125
-250
10
Mid Stroke
270 Degrees
Peak Rebound Velocity
-375
-500
Figure 3