DaveB
Long Jeep Fan
- Location
- Holladay, Utah
In an attempt to understand the geometry of track bars for my latest project that uses high steer I decided to draw up some drawings to show the relationship between track bar and drag link lengths and geometry. I thought this may be an interesting topic for discussion. The first drawing shows how my project is currently set up, which is a drag link that is longer than the track bar with the start and end points are at the same heights but offset due to real word limitations . As the drawing shows the track bar and the drag link travel in different arcs which means as the axle travels up and down the drag link and track bar don't match the same path so bump steer will happen. The range of travel is limited so it shouldn't be too bad since the arcs don't diverge that much (I hope). The second drawing shows the two bars the same length but offset in x. This setup will not bump steer but is hard to implement exactly for most rigs. The next drawing shows the worst of all situations which is mismatched lengths and mismatched heights. As you can see the arcs are very different and this will bump steer badly. The fourth drawing shows what happens if the track bar frame mount was at the same position as the pitman arm joint in both x and y. The arcs traveled by the track bar and the drag link never change relative to each other so no bump steer, especially if the two were the same length. This option is difficult for most applications. The last picture shows leaf springs where the axle travel is up and down and the drag link wants to go in an arc. The level drag link will still bump steer but nothing like the long drag link that is up high. Hopefully my drawing shows up.
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