Shock absorber

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File:Gas damper mov frame 0002.jpg
Shock absorber with internal reservoir. The components are:
A - rod,
B - the piston with seals,
C - the cylinder,
D - oil reservoir,
E - floating piston,
F - air chamber. Animated version

A shock absorber (see alternate names below) is a mechanical device (one kind of dashpot) designed to smooth out or damp shock impulse, and dissipate kinetic energy.

Contents

[edit] Nomenclature

[edit] Description

Pneumatic and hydraulic shock absorbers commonly take the form of a cylinder with a sliding piston inside. The cylinder is filled with a fluid (such as hydraulic fluid) or air. This fluid-filled piston/cylinder combination is a dashpot. Shock absorbers include cushions and springs.

[edit] Explanation

The shock absorber's duty is to absorb or dissipate energy. One design consideration, when designing or choosing a shock absorber, is where that energy will go. In most dashpots, energy is converted to heat inside the viscous fluid. In hydraulic cylinders, the hydraulic fluid heats up, while in air cylinders, the hot air is usually exhausted to the atmosphere. In other types of dashpots, such as electromagnetic types, the dissipated energy can be stored and used later. In general terms, shock absorbers help cushion vehicles on uneven roads.

[edit] Applications

Shock absorbers are an important part of automobile and motorcycle suspensions, aircraft landing gear, and the supports for many industrial machines. Large shock absorbers have also been used in structural engineering to reduce the susceptibility of structures to earthquake damage and resonance. A transverse mounted shock absorber, called a yaw damper, helps keep railcars from swaying excessively from side to side and are important in passenger railroads, commuter rail and rapid transit systems because they prevent railcars from damaging station platforms. The success of passive damping technologies in suppressing vibration is demonstrated by its market size—around US$4.5 billion.

File:R75-rear-shock.jpg
Rear shock absorber and spring of a BMW R75/5 motorcycle

[edit] Vehicle suspension

In a vehicle, shock absorbers reduce the effect of traveling over rough ground, leading to improved ride quality and increase in comfort. While shock absorbers serve the purpose of limiting excessive suspension movement, their intended sole purpose is to dampen spring oscillations. Shock absorbers use valving of oil and gasses to absorb excess energy from the springs. Spring rates are chosen by the manufacturer based on the weight of the vehicle, loaded and unloaded. Some people use shocks to modify spring rates but this is not the correct use. Along with hysteresis in the tire itself, they dampen the energy stored in the motion of the unsprung weight up and down. Effective wheel bounce damping may require tuning shocks to an optimal resistance.

Spring-based shock absorbers commonly use coil springs or leaf springs, though torsion bars are used in torsional shocks as well. Ideal springs alone, however, are not shock absorbers, as springs only store and do not dissipate or absorb energy. Vehicles typically employ both hydraulic shock absorbers and springs or torsion bars. In this combination, "shock absorber" refers specifically to the hydraulic piston that absorbs and dissipates vibration.

[edit] Structures

Applied to a structure such as a building or bridge it may be part of a seismic retrofit or as part of new, earthquake resistant construction. In this application it allows yet restrains motion and absorbs resonant energy, which can cause excessive motion and eventual structural failure.

[edit] Electrical Generation

Modern hybrid cars may eventually be able to generate useful energy from the displacement of the fluid in a shock absorber<ref>http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2009/02/090219-shock-absorber-energy-cars.html</ref>.

[edit] Types of shock absorbers

There are several commonly-used approaches to shock absorption:

[edit] See also

[edit] References

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[edit] Bibliography

[edit] External links

ca:Amortidor (automoció) cs:Tlumič kmitů de:Stoßdämpfer et:Amortisaator es:Amortiguador fr:Amortisseur gl:Amortecedor ko:쇼크 업소버 id:Peredam kejut it:Ammortizzatore lt:Amortizatorius nl:Schokdemper ja:ショックアブソーバー no:Støtdemper pl:Amortyzator pt:Amortecedor ru:Амортизатор sr:Амортизер fi:Iskunvaimennin sv:Stötdämpare tr:Amortisör uk:Амортизатор

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