How Ohlins TTR 4-way Damper Works!

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 27. 01. 2021
  • Just a few weeks before Covid shut everything down we got a chance to tour the Ohlins USA facility in Hendersonville, North Carolina. In this video Mike sits down Ohlins' Director of Engineering, Christer Looh to take apart an Ohlins TTR 4-way damper to see how it works!
    If you haven't already seen our facility tour video make sure you check it out: • Ohlins USA Facility Tour
    In this as LINKS:
    READ MORE on MotoIQ.com! www.motoiq.com/
    FOLLOW US on Instagram: / motoiq
    LIKE US on Facebook: / motoiq
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 19

  • @mixxeerr
    @mixxeerr Před 5 měsíci +1

    Ohlin's top US engineer broke out in cold sweat when the ultimate enthusiast/geek (in a good way) Mike Kojima started questioning him on regressive damping curves

  • @future62
    @future62 Před 3 lety +7

    Spool valves seem so much simpler than shims/stacks.... will we ever see this tech trickle down to the ~$1-2K coilover range?

    • @Turbochargedtwelve
      @Turbochargedtwelve Před 3 lety +3

      They didn’t talk about it at all, it I suspect a lot of those valve pieces have complex geometry and pretty tight tolerances which makes them expensive to produce. Shims on the other hand are quite inexpensive to produce.

  • @anydaynow01
    @anydaynow01 Před 3 lety +1

    Awesome video Mike, thanks for the break down!

  • @JustAnotherHouseCat
    @JustAnotherHouseCat Před 3 lety +1

    Always a good day when Moto IQ uploads! Mike, did you ask what he would think to see Ohlins on a drift car?

  • @cnknguyen
    @cnknguyen Před 3 lety

    Hi Mike.

  • @XWMaster
    @XWMaster Před 3 lety

    What was the other brand you referred to at 7:22?

  • @jmblur
    @jmblur Před 3 lety +1

    27 seconds after release? Dang, I gotta be faster next week

  • @nick4506
    @nick4506 Před 3 lety

    high speed rebound? I think the spring would always rebound at the same rate. not much forcing the weel out.

    • @aaronperelmuter8433
      @aaronperelmuter8433 Před rokem

      You’re correct, the spring does always rebound at the same rate. What else would you expect a spring to do? Is it somehow supposed to magically change its rate at random intervals? 🧐 What exactly are you hoping for? And what do you mean about not much forcing the wheel out? 🤔 It’s the same as EVERY shock in existence, the spring is all that ever force the suspension to rebound, so how can you possibly say there’s not much force hen you have zero idea what spring rate they’re running? Super weird comment. 🤪

    • @nick4506
      @nick4506 Před rokem

      @@aaronperelmuter8433 my guy this comment is two years old. but ill educate you.
      there is highspeed and low speed compression dampening on most dirt bikes to deal with small rummble to hitting a rock or landing a jump. all to deal with the variability on dirt trails.
      but on the rebound side its just the spring, there is nothing unpredictable about the spring. whatever spring rate they got is the spring rate they got. so pretty mutch everything has one blanket rebound dampening setting, not split into high or low speed. i fail to see the utility in a split high and low speed rebound, espicly on a shock designed for smooth paved track surfaces.

  • @HannyDart
    @HannyDart Před 2 lety

    looks alot like Multimatics DSSV to me ^^

    • @motoiq
      @motoiq  Před 2 lety +1

      Well it is also a spool valve.

    • @HannyDart
      @HannyDart Před 2 lety

      @@motoiq yes and it uses specially designed port-shapes in that spool valve :D

  • @km6832
    @km6832 Před 3 lety

    Swedish engineering

    • @aaronperelmuter8433
      @aaronperelmuter8433 Před rokem

      WTF? Ohlins is a Swedish company, what’s German engineering got to do with anything?? 🧐

    • @km6832
      @km6832 Před rokem

      @@aaronperelmuter8433 learnt somethinf new today

    • @aaronperelmuter8433
      @aaronperelmuter8433 Před rokem

      @@km6832 Haha, I thought you were having a go at the Swedes or something, lol. Germans know how to engineer stuff but those Swedes definitely know a thing or two when it comes suspension, that’s for sure.

    • @km6832
      @km6832 Před rokem

      @@aaronperelmuter8433 ohlins sounds german and is on a lot of german cars so its not a bad assumption from me