Not quite what I had in mind. But diff ratio is an important factor.uninformed wrote:so im on the right track????Bush65 wrote:I nearly did, but doubt the OP would be interested in the only methods that I know of for countering torque reaction and still be useful off road - probably too much work for what he wants to do.uninformed wrote:I would have thought that this would have pricked someones ears up and started a discussion?uninformed wrote:have you thought about chnaging your diff and gear ratios to change propshaft speed to help negate the torque twist from engine rotation?
If he was interested he would have done some research after you posted and found out for himself, or asked appropriate questions.
it was a bit of a guess on my half John.....I remember a friend (reliable engineering mind) telling me how noticed the difference when he changed his diffs, and hence ratios from 4.7 to 3.54, transfers where also changed so final ratios would have been similar. i think it got worse when he went to 3.54 as in the front left of the car would lift more at take off and in 2nd when accelerating
if youd like to explain a bit that would be great
cheers,'
Serg
If you want to reduce/eliminate the torque roll, you can employ suspension link forces.
Torque roll comes about from the reaction to the tooth forces (recall Newton stated every force has an equal and opposite reaction) in the diff.
The link forces can be engineered so that there is nett lift on the right side of the chassis or nett pull down on the left side. The other end of the link will have a force in the opposite direction at the axle.
The upper link geometry would normally be set up for this result. The diff ratio affects the link geometry required. But often the diff ratio is not applied because compromises have to be made so ideal numbers are unobtainable and you simply try to get whatever advantage is possible.
Not many bother, but it was being used (maybe not deliberately) by some competition rock buggies (I haven't followed recent trends, so don't know if the have continued with it).
It can be the difference in avoiding roll over in some situations - getting power down on steep side slopes when the left wheels are on the high side. Our original poster appears to be only interested in a cheap bandaid, probably for no other reason than to see if he can go faster at a roundabout.