I was thinking the same. Both cars had Penskes and were underslung.
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Gas is a fluid, however it is not a liquid. There's a huge difference in the states of matter.
Oil used in a shock absorber is a liquid.
The "gas" limiters will function properly on dry shop air, they do not require nitrogen per information I have been supplied.
So if you have a under slung chassis you don't need to run the chain?
I remember Bloomer having to take a devise apart and show that there was nothing inside of it.I wonder if there was just no fluid in it?
Exactly what happened actually cracked the ears at the front of the mount. You better have something to stop the indexing force weather it be and under slung or a chain. I have another question also I've seen the Earnhardt technologies pieces, and I'm aware they offer one gas or you can get it with a spring. I thought we determined years ago that you need a positive stop for consistency, chain is going to stop in the same place everytime. Can this be said about these pieces ETG. has developed?
There is a difference in slowing/dampening the travel just before the limit and using something like a spring that can/will pull the car down and let it lift back up (pogo'ing) with a slight change in LR traction like driving across a slick spot. The less dampened or softer spring rate used with increase the chance of this happening and likely hurt the car way more then anything you will gain.
Now do some of these devises work, some do and some don't and some are legal and some aren't depending on where or what you race. Sadly your going to have to test it yourselves.
In the way that you are using shock (absorber) you are correct, technically anything that physically dampens force is a shock.
Hadn't gotten this in depth into the engineering of the components yet, however a gas will gain viscosity as it heats up, and viscosity of it will also change under pressure. Interesting direction, all be it probably not enough to directly effect much.....hmmm
It would take very small passages, obviously. And aircraft quality seals to survive without lubrication, but very doable. My point is that since the sanctioning bodies became scared of the boogeyman they wrote a giant rulebook they can't enforce. By allowing closed-tube type limiters, they can allow a lot of things to happen out of sight. If no closed tubes were allowed, an eyeball inspection would suffice. It could work and be disassembled and have no fluid. That would fool most inspectors. I hope Penske sends me one when they take my idea. Only fair...