FRONT BEAM-AXLE, Suitable For Car With Front-Overhang.
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Here is another sketch of a Beam-Axle, this time suitable for the front of an FSAE car that necessarily has some front-overhang. This might be because an off-the-shelf engine prevents the driver sitting further back, so their feet end up forward of the front-axle.
(As stated many times before, I believe a driver-entirely-within-the-wheelbase design is best VD-wise, although I accept that this is not always possible when working under some Team constraints. In fact, this sketch was prompted by Christian's similar design on his thread. Because this sketch is in part a derivation of Christian's work, it is not necessarily what I would do if starting entirely from scratch...)
Also squeezed into the sketch are some ideas that might be useful for very different cars. For example, the "Side-Mounted-...-Brake-M/Cs", that allow the Front-Bulkhead to be positioned immediately in front of the pedals. More below...
~o0o~
OVERALL CONCEPT - This is a "Model-T-Ford" style, low-mounted (ie. underfloor) front-beam. The major dimensions can be found, roughly, from the small three-view detail at the bottom-left of the sketch. The wheels and tyres are nominally 10" x ~6+" wide. The Steer-Axis geometry is "centreplane" and should package with the maximum steering-locks shown.
The beam feeds the major road-to-tyreprint loads to its main "Apex-BJ" that connects to chassis at floor level and close to the middle of the car. Thus any heavy chassis structure needed to carry these major loads is low and centrally positioned, thus giving overall low-CG and low-Yaw-Inertia. The beam has only four connections to chassis in total (not including steering). The two main Kinematic constraints are low down and on the car centreline, so allow easy chassis jigging and fabrication.
Spring-Dampers are Direct-Acting, and feed their loads in a close-to-straight path from the wheelprint to a mandated strong part of the frame in the FRH to upper-SIS node. Note that different lengths of DASDs can be accomodated by having the upper-SD-BJ connect to a "frame-bracket" that looks like a frame-tube cantilevered down-and-out from the FRH-SIS node. As long as this tube is aligned with the SD-axis it will be strong and stiff enough, even if it is quite long, say ~15 cm. At most, some small "gusseting" of this tube to the FRH or other frame tubes might be required. Create this bracket with Craftsmanship, then check with Engineering-Analysis, or better yet, do a real Load-Deflection test.
Lateral control of the beam is via a "wishbone" and "Ball-In-Tube" joint, detailed at top-right of sketch. Note that the similar front-beam on the first of my sketches back on page 2 could also have used a similar, but longitudinally much shorter, form of lateral constraint. The Peg-&-Slot used in the page 2 sketch is perhaps simpler in that case, because its Front-Bulkhead is just BEHIND the beam.
Here the B-I-T joint is simply a conventional "spherical joint", with its "ball" bolted firmly to the front of the wishbone, but with its "outer-race" allowed to slide longitudinally in the cylindric housing attached to the chassis (ie. attached to the mandated very strong FB here). The cylindric housing might have an internal bronze sleeve for a "proper job", but not really necessary in FS/FSAE. In fact, the "ball" just has to be reasonably stiffly constrained laterally, but allowed to move a small amount longitudinally. A rubber bush inside the cylindric housing would do the job.
The combination of the B-I-T joint at front, and the Apex-BJ at rear, gives the beam as a whole an 0.8 metre wide "base", along the centreline of the car, to resist any "yaw" (ie. "steer") motions of the beam. This gives very stiff directional control of the beam.
~o0o~
BEAM STRUCTURE - The entire beam is fabricated from folded sheet steel, typically 1 - 3 mm thick. With the dimensions sketched I would suggest mostly 1.6 mm thick (= 1/16" or 16 gauge). This is thin enough to easily fold, and thick enough to easily weld. Some details of the fabrication techniques are shown at the bottom-right of the sketch.
Most of the tubes are folded into octagonal cross-sections, about 60 mm across flats for the main tubes. In fact, the main-beam would be marked out with folding lines ~30 mm apart for the horizontal/vertical faces, and ~20 mm apart for the "bevelled corners". These octagonal cross-sections mean more corners to fold than square or rectangular sections, but the folds are only 45 degrees rather than 90 degrees, and more folds better stiffen the flat faces against buckling.
Also shown are two "reverse folds" at the edges of the sheet where the tube's "seam" is later welded together. This requires extra folding work (I would clamp the sheet so it overlaps the edge of heavy steel table, and use hammer to make these small, sharp-edged folds), but it makes TIG welding of thin sheet, say <1 mm, EFFORTLESS! NO filler rod used, just melt the two lips into each other. A conventional butt-weld can also be done, perhaps with an aluminium backing-bar to prevent burn-through of thin sheet.
The two tapered torque-arms are made with the folding lines converging at the narrow end to ~half the distance given above. So near the Apex-BJ these torque-arms are ~30 mm across flats. A nice gusset can be welded into this Apex-"V" to stiffen everything up. Use a BIG BJ here, perhaps 10 mm ball-bore. Smaller will save negligible mass, and will soon wear-out and start rattling.
The most highly stressed parts of this beam are the "elbows" where the SD-lower-BJs attach to main-beam-to-torque-arm nodes. Here the torque-arms are merged with the main-beam so they meet the outboard part of the beam, which rises up at ~45 degrees, at a mitre-joint cross-section of about 100 mm wide, x ~80 mm high. The rising part of the beam then tapers to meet the next outboard horizontal section, which is ~60 mm octagonal inboard, morphing to 60 mm SQUARE outboard. Folded sheet structures allow lots of fancy stuff like this!
IMPORTANTLY, all the mitre-joints (aka "lobster-backs") MUST have internal webs! Well, you can try without, but the structure is greatly weakened. These webs prevent the corners from crushing under bending loads. (Do some force diagrams of the skin-stresses!) The webs can be the same thickness sheet as the outer skins, or can be twice as thick with a lightening hole in the middle. The thicker webs can make the welding procedure easier, or not, depending on details...
The amount of gusseting required at the various joints is best determined as follows. Make rough trial-run beams, then LOAD TEST TO DESTRUCTION! Note where the skins first start to buckle, or buckle the most. Gusset said weak points. RETEST TO DESTRUCTION ... until whole structure is giving up UNIFORMLY. So, NO WEAK POINTS.
BTW, I made a half-scale, half-beam (ie. only one side of centreline) out of about half a cereal-cardboard-box + sticky-tape, in about one hour while watching telly. Hot-melt-glue-gun does a better job of "welding", but is messy, and, err..., kids have "hidden" it! This sort of Cardboard-Aided-Design makes it very easy to decide where "faces and edges" should go, and gives a quick and accurate indication of how the structure will fail, so where more section-size/webs/gussets are needed.
~o0o~
STEER-AXES - My preference is the Inverted-Tractor-KPs as detailed on this SLT-Swing-Arms post. Compact, strong, stiff, low-friction...
Alternately, a more conventional upright can be used, as shown at top-left of sketch. This has Camber-Adjustment by shims between the beam and a small "Top-BJ-Carrier". This gives Camber-Change = Steer-Axis-Inclination-Change, which is OK. Castor-Adjustment is made via swapping different Top-BJ-Carriers, which move the Top-BJ fore-aft. Castor should only need to be adjusted occasionally in early testing, so "change-part" restrictions in the Rules are NOT a problem.
A big-ish question here is do you carry the vertical Fz loads of this conventional upright via the lower-BJ, or the upper-BJ, or both? I know what I would do... but I prefer the Tractor-style...
~o0o~
Last bit next (10k char limit!!!)
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