When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: small coilover shocks

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Coilover - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coilover

    A mono-tube coilover is a single piston and rod assembly in a damping case in which both compression and rebound occur. A larger mono-tube shock will be able to displace more hydraulic fluid, providing a more sensitive response to small suspension movements than twin-tube shocks. A twin-tube coilover is more complex than a mono-tube assembly.

  3. Shock absorber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shock_absorber

    Shock absorbers are an important part of car suspension designed to increase comfort, stability and overall safety. The shock absorber, produced with precision and engineering skills, has many important features. The most common type is a hydraulic shock absorber, which usually includes a piston, a cylinder, and an oil-filled chamber.

  4. MacPherson strut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MacPherson_strut

    Despite the drawbacks, the MacPherson strut set-up is still used on some high performance cars, because they tend to have relatively small suspension travel, and so do not have the same kinematic problems. Up until the 1989 model year (964), Porsche 911 used a similar strut design that did not have coil springs, using torsion bar suspension ...

  5. Motorcycle suspension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorcycle_suspension

    The hydraulic shock absorbers used on the rear suspensions of motorcycles are essentially the same as those used in other vehicle applications. Motorcycle shocks do differ slightly in that they nearly always use a coil-over spring. In other words, the spring for the rear suspension is a coil spring that is installed over, or around, the shock.

  6. Chapman strut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chapman_strut

    Lotus 18 with wishbone suspension. The successful mid-engined Lotus 18 of 1960 no longer had the high bodywork behind the driver's seat on which to mount the tops of the struts. [24] Instead it used a wishbone rear suspension with wide-based tube lower wishbones carrying coilover shocks. The upper wishbones though were, once again in the style ...

  7. MagneRide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MagneRide

    MagneRide is an automotive adaptive suspension with magnetorheological damper system developed by the Delphi Automotive corporation, [1] [2] that uses magnetically controlled dampers, or shock absorbers, for a highly adaptive ride. As opposed to traditional suspension systems, MagneRide has no mechanical valves or even small moving parts that ...