![]() 09/20/2017 at 12:18 • Filed to: None | ![]() | ![]() |
undercarriage shots of a 250 gto
http://revolutiondetailing.co.uk/portfolio/1962-ferrari-250-gto-tour-return/#!prettyPhoto
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http://revolutiondetailing.co.uk/portfolio/1962-ferrari-250-gto-tour-return/#
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![]() 09/20/2017 at 12:25 |
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them leaf springs though
![]() 09/20/2017 at 12:34 |
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designed to exacting specifications to make all the money leaf your wallet
![]() 09/20/2017 at 12:36 |
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What a weird-looking brake caliper!
![]() 09/20/2017 at 12:48 |
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Upper part may be parking brake - some Jaguars are set up that way.
![]() 09/20/2017 at 12:57 |
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Huh. I’m not familiar with those. Is that just an arm that’s hinged off of the main caliper, with its own pad?
![]() 09/20/2017 at 13:09 |
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You’re right. Two piston rear caliper with a separate mechanical parking brake caliper.
![]() 09/20/2017 at 13:16 |
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Obsoive (on a ‘62 Mk II):
This setup was used on all the inboard brake rears, I believe, up to the late ‘80s on the XJS.
![]() 09/20/2017 at 13:29 |
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Neat!
![]() 09/20/2017 at 13:49 |
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You can be ignorant if you want, there’s a 4-link + Watts link locating the axle while the leafs with dual shackles only provide a spring rate. This is properly designed leaf spring suspension, though I am wondering why there’s a coilover as well, probably easier to tune a parallel spring to get the overall desired spring rate rather than keep swapping leafs all around.
![]() 09/20/2017 at 16:03 |
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It’s easy to joke, but the C7 still uses leaf springs and it seems pretty competent.
![]() 09/20/2017 at 16:43 |
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pretty sure the new vette does not have leaf springs:
![]() 09/20/2017 at 19:05 |
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Sure it does, they’re just sideways, or “transverse leaf springs” as engineers like to call them. It’s a little hard to see in your pictures, but the lack of any coil springs or struts gives it away. The rear leaf spring is actually the black piece that pokes through the lower wishbones in your upper picture. It’s made of a composite, so it looks a bit different than a steel spring would. Here’s a better view, the yellow arrow points to the spring:
And here is the front suspension - it’s a little easier to see here:
![]() 09/20/2017 at 22:16 |
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Hunh...
“the_more_you_know.gif”
![]() 09/20/2017 at 23:12 |
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Ugh Kinja
![]() 09/20/2017 at 23:33 |
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Here’s another modern one I just learned about: the 2015+ Volvo XC90 rear suspension (front is MacPherson struts). The leaf spring is the yellow part in the picture - it’s a polyurethane composite so that’s just the natural color of it. What’s clever about this for an SUV is that it reduces the side of the shock towers since they don’t need to fit coils in there, which increases 3rd row and cargo room without increasing the exterior size and adding weight. Obviously it’s a lot different than the Ferrari setup, but it is still technically a leaf spring.
As far as I know besides the Corvette and Volvo the only other modern cars still using this setup are Smarts, but I really don’t know anything about their setup and in photos it looks like coils so they may have something totally wacky going on.
![]() 09/20/2017 at 23:47 |
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Well and every single quad cab >45k pickup truck from Nissan/Ram/Ford/GM
![]() 09/20/2017 at 23:49 |
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Haha yeah I meant the sideways ones but gotcha. I think even some of the little FWD vans like the Nissan NV200 are using leafs in the rear too.