The limit straps are tight at ride height. No down travel. Couple of reasons for this
1. If I allowed down travel at speed through rough terrain, the upper link mounts could drop low enough momentarily to move the upper roll axis down below the center of gravity, suddenly allowing for body roll and it's accompanying axle steer. Could result in a very sudden and extremely squirrelly situation.
2. Up travel is necessary to absorb hits. Down travel is not, unless you hit a magically suspended boulder that is three feet in the air with the top of your tire.
In order to reduce the rebound shock load on the limit straps, I told ADS to do some stiff rebound valving on the shocks. I also told them to valve compression very lightly so that the springs can do their job instead of the shocks sharing the load, leading to heat, blown shocks, etc. You only have to dampen in one direction to control oscillation.
As far as crawling is concerned, lack of down travel may lead to nosing down into some holes, or having my rear end drop here and there. I'm ok with that, given the rig's length and width. No down travel also limits my articulation (which is still pretty good), but my honest opinion is that big articulation is overrated when you are locked front and rear. As long as most of your tires are touching the ground, you are going to move.
The only situation I can think of where it will hurt me is in big breakover situations where my front tires cannot drop and grip to help pull me over. I'm ok with that, too. Stability in all situations is far more important to me than being able to conquer every obstacle.
1. If I allowed down travel at speed through rough terrain, the upper link mounts could drop low enough momentarily to move the upper roll axis down below the center of gravity, suddenly allowing for body roll and it's accompanying axle steer. Could result in a very sudden and extremely squirrelly situation.
2. Up travel is necessary to absorb hits. Down travel is not, unless you hit a magically suspended boulder that is three feet in the air with the top of your tire.
In order to reduce the rebound shock load on the limit straps, I told ADS to do some stiff rebound valving on the shocks. I also told them to valve compression very lightly so that the springs can do their job instead of the shocks sharing the load, leading to heat, blown shocks, etc. You only have to dampen in one direction to control oscillation.
As far as crawling is concerned, lack of down travel may lead to nosing down into some holes, or having my rear end drop here and there. I'm ok with that, given the rig's length and width. No down travel also limits my articulation (which is still pretty good), but my honest opinion is that big articulation is overrated when you are locked front and rear. As long as most of your tires are touching the ground, you are going to move.
The only situation I can think of where it will hurt me is in big breakover situations where my front tires cannot drop and grip to help pull me over. I'm ok with that, too. Stability in all situations is far more important to me than being able to conquer every obstacle.
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