We want to make getting Your Car Serviced or Repaired as EASY and HASSLE FREE as possible for YOU! To help with this, we are now offering CONTACT FREE Servicing and Repairs, Including a free Collection and Delivery Service and the option to pay by card over the phone. We are Fully Compliant with Government Guidelines regarding Coronavirus/COVID-19 and to help all our customers who Need their cars during this difficult time we intend to stay open as long as it is safe for us to do so. We are a Family Owned and Run Business who have been operating from the same premises in Kilbarrack since 1979, so you can be assured that we’re well equipped to look after any motoring problem that you may have. Please call us on 01 8390444 with any queries.
When people think of automobile performance, they normally think of horsepower, torque and zero-to-60 acceleration. But all of the power generated by a piston engine is useless if the driver can’t control the car. That’s why automobile engineers turned their attention to the suspension system almost as soon as they had mastered the four-stroke internal combustion engine.
The job of a car suspension is to maximize the friction between the tyre’s and the road surface, to provide steering stability with good handling and to ensure the comfort of the passengers. If a road were perfectly flat, with no irregularities, suspensions wouldn’t be necessary. But roads are far from flat. Even freshly paved highways have subtle imperfections that can interact with the wheels of a car. It’s these imperfections that apply forces to the wheels. According to Newton’s laws of motion, all forces have both magnitude and direction. A bump in the road causes the wheel to move up and down perpendicular to the road surface. The magnitude, of course, depends on whether the wheel is striking a giant bump or a tiny speck. Either way, the car wheel experiences a vertical acceleration as it passes over an imperfection.
Without an intervening structure, all of wheel’s vertical energy is transferred to the frame, which moves in the same direction. In such a situation, the wheels can lose contact with the road completely. Then, under the downward force of gravity, the wheels can slam back into the road surface. What you need is a system that will absorb the energy of the vertically accelerated wheel, allowing the frame and body to ride undisturbed while the wheels follow bumps in the road.
The study of the forces at work on a moving car is called vehicle dynamics, and you need to understand some of these concepts in order to appreciate why a suspension is necessary in the first place. Most automobile engineers consider the dynamics of a moving car from two perspectives:
Ride: – a car’s ability to smooth out a bumpy road.
Handling: – a car’s ability to safely accelerate, brake and corner.
Let Dublin Automotive Services take care of your Steering and Suspension Repairs and Maintenance. We supply and fit only Quality Approved Parts.
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