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Author: Subject: KPI angle
9000rpm

posted on 11/8/10 at 11:33 AM Reply With Quote
KPI angle

I am finding different opinions on the net regarding how KPI should be measured.

Should KPI angle be measured between king pin axis and vertical wheel axis Or between king pin axis and true vertical

Anyone knows this ?

thanks

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Strontium Dog

posted on 11/8/10 at 12:19 PM Reply With Quote
Hi,

KPI is taken from the face of the upright (where the stub axle mounts) and a line drawn through the top and bottom ball joint centres (centres of the balls themselves)!

This measurement is fixed and does not change with suspension movements as it would if you used true vertical.

Hope that helps, if you need more help let me know and I'll scan and post a drawing.

Cheers Si.

[Edited on 11/8/10 by Strontium Dog]

[Edited on 11/8/10 by Strontium Dog]

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britishtrident

posted on 11/8/10 at 12:54 PM Reply With Quote
Exact opposite of a above.


The KPI when setting up is measured in the normal laden condition from the vertical (ie the normal to the road surface).
This implies setting more negative camber increases KPI.


KPI will alter with suspension movement as will caster angle.





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richardlee237

posted on 11/8/10 at 01:25 PM Reply With Quote
My understanding is that KPI is measured between the axis of rotation of the kingpin and the true vertical.

Camber is the angle between the plane of rotation of the wheel and the true vertical.

These 2 angles added together will not change with suspension travel.

I notice however that on american websites KPI seems to be referred to the axis perpendicular to the axle axis as Strontium dog says.

From a design point of view it would seem reasonable that the angles were referred to a fixed datum (the vertical ) irrespective of suspension movement.

Interesting though !





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Liam

posted on 11/8/10 at 01:31 PM Reply With Quote
Always measured from true vertical as far as I'm aware.
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9000rpm

posted on 11/8/10 at 01:52 PM Reply With Quote
I am with what Strontium Dog suggested but as i see it there are also mixed opinions about it.

Looking at designs of uprights from different manufactures, the angle is always present meaning that KPI is within the design of the upright.

If KPI was taken from true verical, an upright can be designed with 0 KPI and KPI (and camber) will be added via shorter/longer wishbones.

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richardlee237

posted on 11/8/10 at 02:27 PM Reply With Quote
If you are designing or calculating suspension geometry or forces then you need fixed references planes to refer to, which is why these angles are referenced as they are.

If you generate all the KPI in the wishbones then you compromise the wishbone geometry which has also to compensate for body roll.





Quote Lord Kelvin
“Large increases in cost with questionable increases in performance can be tolerated only in race horses and women.”

Quote Richard Lee

"and cars"

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Liam

posted on 11/8/10 at 04:40 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by 9000rpm
I am with what Strontium Dog suggested but as i see it there are also mixed opinions about it.


Not really a matter of opinion, though. It's a definition, and the SAE says measured from vertical.

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Neville Jones

posted on 11/8/10 at 06:47 PM Reply With Quote
KPI is a fixed design point, relative to the wheel rotation axis. NOT a moveable thing measured to the vertical at whatever attitude the car is sitting at the time.

Best described as the angle between a line drawn at right angles to the wheel rotation axis, and the line drawn between top and bottom ball joint centres.

Look at an old (or not so, eg Sherpa van or big truck) type front beam axle. The king pin is fixed in relation to the beam, thus the kpi is a fixed and non moveable piece of geometry.

Cheers,
Nev.

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9000rpm

posted on 11/8/10 at 06:57 PM Reply With Quote
Did I open a can of worms with this subject ??



Although i am mostly after the answer for a macpherson setup (for my tintop) but same principle should apply for a double wishbone setup.

here is an scetch not to scale (with exaggerated camber) of both opinions

Which is the KPI angle, 13.57deg or 21.01Deg


[Edited on 11/8/10 by 9000rpm]

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Liam

posted on 11/8/10 at 09:37 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Neville Jones
KPI is a fixed design point, relative to the wheel rotation axis. NOT a moveable thing measured to the vertical at whatever attitude the car is sitting at the time.

Best described as the angle between a line drawn at right angles to the wheel rotation axis, and the line drawn between top and bottom ball joint centres.


In the back of my copy of Fundamentals of Vehicle Dynamics published by the SAE, Appendix A is 'SAE J670 Vehicle Dynamics Terminology' - a big glossary basically. In that it says:

Kingpin Inclination - The angle in front elevation between the steering axis and the vertical.

Good enough for me (and everyone else in the world). You're of course entitled to your own ideas (as you have regarding torsen diffs, for example ). Do you have a problem with measuring camber and caster from the vertical? And with the fact that most 'fixed design points' of a vehicle suspension - camber, caster, toe, etc - can alter with suspension travel and/or chassis roll/pitch? Why would KPI be defined any differently?

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Neville Jones

posted on 12/8/10 at 09:10 AM Reply With Quote
[Kingpin Inclination - The angle in front elevation between the steering axis and the vertical.] This assumes, and is measured at, 0 camber and is a fixed geometrical figure in the design.

To put it another way, the angle between the axle and the effective kingpin line doesn't change with wheel movement, or camber changes made through adjustment, thus kpi is a fixed angle between the effective kingpin line and a line drawn at right angles to the wheel axle centreline.

Otherwise, KPI could never be stated, as it would be a dynamic figure with suspension travel, as you would believe. Not so.

I've got no problem with the SAE terminology, after all, it's what I live by. You've just got to know and understand the conditions applied to derive the terminology. I do. Do you? KPI is measured with the wheel rotational axis horizontal, and is a fixed geometrical constraint, so is measured as I put.

Torsen diffs? I've worked with them enough to know how a genuine Gleason works. And a Quaiffe is not a Gleason, by the simple fact that Quaiffe won't pay the Patent License fee to make a proper Gleason Type Torsen diff, and that's why the quaiffe has very different characteristics to a proper Torsen. All of the Torsens I've worked with WILL drive only one wheel, if the other is off the ground, or missing altogether.

Cheers,
Nev.







[Edited on 12/8/10 by Neville Jones]

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Strontium Dog

posted on 13/8/10 at 12:30 AM Reply With Quote
Yep. Neville is right, the reference to measured from the vertical assumes the axle is horizontal for design purposes. It is your interpretation of the SAE which is incorrect.

KPI is a constant and as to other changeable geometries they are specified at normal loaded hight, as an example etc. and are intended to be taken at these given points. Otherwise how would you ever set them?

And I've got a Torsen diff in my car so do I win a fridge magnet or what?!

[Edited on 13/8/10 by Strontium Dog]

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Ninehigh

posted on 13/8/10 at 06:52 AM Reply With Quote
You could have asked this 2 months ago I could have looked it up in college.

I previously had and from what I understand of it that picture doesn't have one. Iirc it's something to do with a certain type of suspension mostly found on trucks these days. It's very similar to caster angle.

Again from what I understand it's like the difference between measuring a petrol engine in HP and an electric motor in KW, they both move the car...






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interestedparty

posted on 13/8/10 at 07:30 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Ninehigh


I previously had and from what I understand of it that picture doesn't have one. Iirc it's something to do with a certain type of suspension mostly found on trucks these days. It's very similar to caster angle.




Are you sure about that?





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Ninehigh

posted on 13/8/10 at 08:38 AM Reply With Quote
Right found my notes:

King Pin Inclination (KPI) is the inward lean of the king-pins (up, towards the centre of the vehicle)

KPI causes some of the self centring action of the steering.

It also modifies the amount of camber change caused by the caster angle when the steering is turned, lessening negative camber gain on the outside front wheel and increasing positive camber gain on the inside front wheel.

It would be unusual to deliberately alter KPI, but it can be adjusted using the 'camber' adjusters.


And from the look of the picture on the next page it's measured against either true vertical or the camber angle...

I was hoping it would say a bit more..






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