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Track bar / drag link geometry

Yeller

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Thanks for feedback, I hadn't considered the aspect of one side moving up changing thrust angle, good to roll into my thinking. I'm assuming that when you say shock valving reducing the motion, it's things like orifice changes to maybe a smaller orifice, etc?

Also, I wanted to circle back to your comment on a front sway bar helping things, any suggestions of size / diameter / solid, etc of front sway bar in addition to shock valving adjustments?

Happy Easter to all!
Not sure who’s coilovers your running but most use a shim pack. I’ll reiterate how how valuable a good shock tuner is, literally worth his or her weight in gold. Wish I had a recommendation.

Any sway bar will help. Personally I’d put Currie Antirock on it and call it a day.
 

ntsqd

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As close to a recommendation for a tuner that I can come to is that a friend had Accutune tune the Fox's on his stock ride height JK on 37's and has been happy with their work.
 
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ksagis

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One more wrinkle, I finally got around to measuring the top down plane and compared angles fore/aft. Looks like the track bar has about 3 degree of more angle than drag link fore / aft angle.

I think I can select an angle in the vertical plane to help compensate for the fore / aft difference (i.e. not making them parallel as viewed forward looking aft)

This has felt like cutting open a golf ball and unwinding it! :)
 

Yeller

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The for/aft angle is a minuscule difference. There is a difference but has little to no effect. The drag link for/aft will move that much steering lock to lock. I could be wrong but have never found it to cause any issue.
 

ntsqd

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When the angles are shallow and the difference in the angles is small, then there is very little lateral translation for each, which makes the translational difference even less.

Clear as mud?
 
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ksagis

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When the angles are shallow and the difference in the angles is small, then there is very little lateral translation for each, which makes the translational difference even less.

Clear as mud?
I must need to think about it more, it seemed to me a difference in angle in either plane would have a similar affect…

Hmmmm. I’m sure this bevy at the airport will add clarity

Edit: the bevy and your guidance is making sense. The key is being much closer to flat angles versus the other plane.
 
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ksagis

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The for/aft angle is a minuscule difference. There is a difference but has little to no effect. The drag link for/aft will move that much steering lock to lock. I could be wrong but have never found it to cause any issue.
You advice and the advice from @ntsqd makes total sense after I reflected on it.

I’m gonna do some CAD work to see what kentucky windage I want to dial in.

Agree that at high turn angles it’d change geometry as you say but for freeway speeds and smaller wheel angles, if I’m gonna cut and weld, may as well see if I can accommodate this aspect as well.
 

ntsqd

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The circle below is a unit of one in diameter. Note how small the difference in end-point positions in the horizontal direction is vs. the difference in the vertical direction.

i-sxK6kSC-L.jpg


Let's say that the change in wheel-base caused by the radius arms that Yeller mentioned somewhere above causes that 6° angle to go to zero. In doing so it has only moved the end-point .003 of whatever units we're measuring in. That's not a heck of a lot of change.
 
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ksagis

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0.003” is definately noise level difference.

Not sure I totally get your point on unit of 1 diameter. Thinking that for a difference in my case of roughly 41” for drag link and 34” for track bar, it’s roughly 7x your 0.003” number.

Edit: I see the example was starting at 6 deg and going all the way to flat. That seems like it would be likely a pretty large suspension movement
 
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ntsqd

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I was only showing the X direction delta vs. the Y direction delta in a Unit Circle where all distances are 1 or less. If we equate those distances in a Unit Circle to those of a circle with a radius of 41" then 41" X .003 = .123" Since we are looking at this from above, that .123" of position change is fore/aft, and only for a 6° angle. Need to know what that fore/aft position change is for the other link before we can arrive at any result.
Let's say that the other link is at an 8° angle. the matching position change is .005 on the Unit Circle. If that link is 39" long then: 39" X .005 = .195"

That means that the total difference in position change between those two links is .072" Which is the bump-steer due to the lack of parallelism and length difference as seen from above. Not noise, but not huge either.

*I pulled the length and angle for the second link out of thin air because I'm being called to dinner and I wanted to finish this post first. No idea how real those numbers are.
 
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ksagis

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I was only showing the X direction delta vs. the Y direction delta in a Unit Circle where all distances are 1 or less. If we equate those distances in a Unit Circle to those of a circle with a radius of 41" then 41" X .003 = .123" Since we are looking at this from above, that .123" of position change is fore/aft, and only for a 6° angle. Need to know what that fore/aft position change is for the other link before we can arrive at any result.
Let's say that the other link is at an 8° angle. the matching position change is .005 on the Unit Circle. If that link is 39" long then: 39" X .005 = .195"

That means that the total difference in position change between those two links is .072" Which is the bump-steer due to the lack of parallelism and length difference as seen from above. Not noise, but not huge either.

*I pulled the length and angle for the second link out of thin air because I'm being called to dinner and I wanted to finish this post first. No idea how real those numbers are.
Dinner trumps all!

Drag link is 41.25 and aft angled 4.2 deg

Track bar is 34.75 and aft angled 8.6 deg

I think maybe this causes something that I wouldn’t call bump steer, or maybe another version of bump steer. I think this changes the angle of the axle and also maybe introduces bump steer too.

Like Yeller said, maybe this is the lessor of the two evils so dont need to worry about it as much
 

Yeller

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The aft angle difference doesn’t change how the axle end of the link moves.

I’ll stir the water a little more….I’ve worked on rear axles, with a track bar at 45 degrees to the axle, as in the frame is 30” wide and the track bar needed to fit within the frame rails. By moving the attachment point forward on the frame by 30”, the track bar becomes 45” long, improving handling. This also happens to be the length of the lower control arms, this made the axle stay centered in the chassis, it made it work like a diagonal in a roof truss. Now this was not on a 4x4, was a couple of very low street trucks. This is an extreme example but I still stand by your situation is not enough to cause any negative input.

In @ntsqd ‘s defense, having had the opportunity to indulge in Mrs ntsqd’s dinners, it does trump all😎😋
 
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ksagis

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I think you're saying that aft angles (as viewed from the top), coupled with suspension travel, doesn't cause any knuckle movement. It only causes the entire axle assembly to move left and right during suspension travel? (that makes sense to me if the aft angles are the same)

And I think you're also saying the knuckle doesn't turn (when the suspension moves vertically) in the case of the aft angles not being the same.

Do I have that all correct?

P.S. I know I'm overworking this, wanting to be sure I understand all the nuances.
 

ntsqd

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What I was attempting to show above is that unless the drag-link and the trac-bar are operating in a parallelogram that there will be some bump-steer incurred with whatever that suspension motion might cause in fore/aft translation. It is not usually very much, but it is there. More so with a radius arm and less so with 3 or 4 or 18 links.
The same thoughts, rules of thumb, and what-not applied to these two links in the front view also apply to them in the top view. It is just that the differences tend to be less, so the undesirable results tend to be smaller.

What I'm seeing with any linkage suspension that there will be some fore/aft translation of the axle as the suspension is cycled it's full range of motion. This is because the travel path, as viewed from the side, is something roughly resembling an arc. With a radius arm it is an arc and the fore/aft translation will be a factor. With a 3 or 4 link it may still be an arc or it may be something that has to be extended radically beyond the actual range of motion for it to look like an arc. Within the useful travel range such a travel path may not exhibit enough fore/aft translation to be worth any thought, but it is still there. How much fore/aft translation is going to be unique to a particular set of linkage lengths and their geometry.

Drag race ladder bar rear suspensions tend to run a diagonal link between the lower tubes of the ladder bars that can be 45° or more to the chassis CL. As neither end is separately attached to the chassis or the axle those suspensions exhibit no lateral movement in their travel range. Pretty primitive design, but it works for that use.
 
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