- Swing axle
A swing axle is a simple type of
independent suspension first used in early aircraft (1910 or before), such as the Sopwith and Fokker, usually with rubber bungee and no damping. Many later motor car rear swing axles haveuniversal joint s connecting thedriveshaft s to the differential, which is attached to thechassis . They do not have universal joints at the wheels: the wheels are always perpendicular to the driveshafts. Swing axle suspensions traditionally usedleaf spring s andshock absorber s. Volkswagens built before 1967 used torsion bars as their spring.This type of suspension was considered better than the more typical
solid axle for two reasons:
# It reducedunsprung weight since the differential is mounted to thechassis
# It eliminates sympatheticcamber changes on opposite wheelsHowever, there are a number of shortcomings to this arrangement:
# A great amount of single-wheel camber change is experienced since the wheel is always perpendicular to the driveshaft
# "Jacking" on suspension unloading (or rebound) causes positive camber changes on both sides
# Reduction in cornering forces due to change in camber can lead to oversteer instability and in extreme caseslift-off oversteer These problems were evident on
Volkswagen up until 1967, theMercedes-Benz 300SL , the early versions of thePorsche 356 , theTriumph Herald , Vitesse and Spitfire,Tatra T603 and others.Mercedes-Benz addressed the inherent handling issues by producing swing axles with a single-pivot point located under the differential, and thus well below the axle. This configuration markedly reduced the tendency to "jack-up" and the later low pivot swing-axle equipped cars were praised in contemporary publications for their handling. The low-pivot swing-axle remained in production with
Mercedes-Benz W108 280SE and 300SEL until 1972. It was fitted to the 300SEL 6.3, which was during the early 70s the worlds fastest production sedan. AMG modified 6.3 were also raced with the stock swing axle. [http://www.europeancarweb.com/features/epcp_0610_the_history_of_amg/index.html] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T-XjbQCR_l0Swing axles were supplanted by
deDion axle s in the late 1960s, thoughlive axle s remained the most common. Most rear suspensions have been replaced by more modernindependent suspension s in recent years, and both swing and deDion types are virtually unused today.The first production (1960–1964) Chevrolet
Corvair used this design. The alleged unsafe behaviour of theCorvair was described in detail byRalph Nader in his book "Unsafe at Any Speed ". Second Production Corvairs (1965–1969) used a true independent rear suspension system.Another use of the swing axle concept is Ford's "Twin I-Beam" front suspension for trucks. This has solid axles (so they do not transmit power). Though it is touted as an independent suspension system in that each tire rises and falls without affecting the position of the other, the parallelogram action of the A-arm suspension system is not present. Each tire in fact moves with a similar camber change to that of the powered swing axles for the rear wheels listed above. But the pivot point of the axles is located not in the middle of the car but nearly on the other beam of the chassis, so the effect is far less and quite safe.
External links
* [http://www.autozine.org/technical_school/suspension/tech_suspension2.htm#Swing AutoZine Technical School site]
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