Excellent information and easy to understand! thank you. My situation is slightly different than the normal folks as I have removed the top heavy two-door Bronco top and the Side Glass, and rear portion of the roll bar as well. While these are not super heavy items they are at nearly the top of the vehicle and by removing them all together I feel I have lowered the CG by a smidgen (if not a lot.) Additionally, eventually I plan on actually running my suspension height near OEM, or maybe 1 in above original Sasquatch ride height, the rest of my lift actually comes from the huge tires 41 in versus the 34s that come stock on Sasquatch. This does more to raise the center of gravity than the struts lift themselves as the axles and vehicle are lifted from the tire change. Because of these differences I have opted to keep the Roll center below the axle, I may play around with different mounting points and bracketry to see how it affects the handling and if I do I'll update folks with the data in the future.Nice reference on how Panhard affects handling. A good read.
Some thoughts on location of Panhard bar and roll center, for those that are interested. The Oem Panhard is long and symmetrically mounted (both frame and axle mount locations are same distance from vehicle centerline).
For static condition at ride height only (a simplified case). The vehicle roll (rotations about the for-aft axis) occur about the roll axis. A line connecting the rear axle roll center and the front axle roll center.
Lateral forces acting on vehicle produce a torque about the roll axis with momentum arm as the vertical distance between applied lateral force and roll axis. Lateral forces, such as a change in lateral velocity that occurs during cornering, occur at vehicle CG. The roll moment can be defined as the vertical distance between CG an roll axis (for a given constant lateral force).
Considering rear axle only (a simplification), the lateral forces acting at CG are transferred to axle and then produce vertical and lateral (friction) forces at tire/ground contact patch. the load path for the lateral forces from body to axle occur through upper and lower links, struts, and Panhard bar. A simple assumption is that all of the suspension links have pinned ends and can only take axial loading.
For case with 4 link suspension (no Panhard), the only way to transfer lateral load from body to axle is for the links to be triangulated somewhat, having some angle in lateral direction. Based on the link angles, the intersections of their line of actions with the vertical/lateral plane through the axle dictates the roll center.
For the case with Panhard bar, the panhard dominates the lateral load transfer to the axle since it is oriented in the lateral plane. The roll center then simply has to fall along the Panhard line of action somewhere. For symmetrically mounted oem Panhard this is the intersection with the vehicle central plane (for-aft and vertical axes).
Some numbers based on CAD data for OEM SAS ride height. CG is 15.5” in vertical direction from rear axle centerline. Roll center with Panhard is about 1” vertically below axle centerline. So roll moment is then about 14” (CG above roll center).
Lifting 2” via struts, produces a 2” rise in sprung CG. Leveling panhard with a 2” axle mount bracket also raises roll center by 2”, so roll moment remains same as oem. Leveling panhard via frame mount bracket drops roll center back to oem location but increase roll moment by 2” (since CG increases by 2”). A 14% increase in roll moment (2/14), not a whole lot.
Probably the most important thing is to level panhard at ride height so to minimize lateral axle motion during suspension travel. It would be interesting to see what real world handling differences occur with either frame or axle mount height adjustments. A small increase in roll moment may be a fair sacrifice to keep roll center at axle level (tighter corner handling).![]()
Lastly, I'm wondering how the Roll center versus CG Center effects articulation? It seems to me the rear axle would articulate easier with the CG Center well above the Roll center?
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