JBee
Well-known member
- First Name
- JB
- Joined
- Nov 22, 2019
- Threads
- 18
- Messages
- 4,913
- Reaction score
- 6,362
- Location
- Australia
- Vehicles
- Cybertruck
- Occupation
- . Professional Hobbyist
This is not about emotion so I need not chill. It is about what is/not known vs. conjecture.
There is no SS outer skin shown in that photograph and any number of people (Sandy Munro included) have noted the same. This is fact. There are some inner stampings shown that are never load-carrying, and the 'casting' shown here (which I happen to believe is just a tooling jig for what is to come later) is, indeed, structural (for the drive unit and suspension but not for vehicle rigidity) and exists on every vehicle in some form but is not considered the skeleton as in a body on frame or unibody design to my knowledge.
I am not defining terms. Your definition of exoskeleton is fine with me. My challenge is that you are claiming that the SS skin has changed and you do not know (no one outside of Tesla does).It doesn't really matter to me how many words you have uttered on the subject, or how often, I disagree with the same arguments over and over again. If/When Tesla/Elon tell us that the SS skin has changed material, thickness, or dimensions, that is when we can chat about changes. Or, when we start seeing SS skins in the dumpster and can 'measure' them, even in an ad hoc fashion. But definitely not because of any user-promoted argument however logical or reasonable.
I am not claiming something "changed" rather that we never knew how thick or what construction was used in the first place. To be "handgun bulletproof" only requires the passenger cabin itself to be 3mm SS. The windows are the weak link here I think for this claim, but it will be better than any other vehicle off a assembly line."So it would be bed, cast, suspension, wheels". Is the current argument about where the vertical load path from cargo to road is? If so, then sure, but that is not what the SS skin is for. On the other hand, if the argument is about the function of the 3mm SS outer skin, then the vertical load from cargo to road is an orthogonal discussion. If you watch the 2 videos I posted (one by ConnectingTheDots and the other by TheLimitingFactor), which I believe speak convincingly about the merits of a 3mm SS outer skin, they never talk about the vertical load path of cargo to road. Rather, they talk about the overall longitudinal and flexural rigidity of [any] vehicle and how the different designs achieve it. I no longer have the tools to perform an FEA on the design but I do believe that I would find, if I did perform one, that the 3mm SS outer skin does provide the claimed rigidity.
From a design perspective there is no reason to artificially increase the length of the load path so that the fenders can be included structurally. Load will go the shortest path regardless. I think it is important to discern whether the load has to go to before making up assumptions of why something has to be rigid, like from corner to corner on the CT body, whereas in reality there will never be such a load applied across that section, as all loads in normal operation must terminate in a force on one of the wheels. Any force impact on the bodywork should be identified as a crash, or failure state instead.
In this case the load point for weight are the suspension springs/airbags which are actually meant to reduce torsional loads from wheel height offsets. In the front we have seen the shock/spring tower, which we can expect to be connected to the cast like in the MY.
In the back they are not visible, which leads me to believe they might be a pushrod system that is tucked under the bed. There is no indication of any opening to have the springs mounted above the tyre in the sail storage area, and it's physically not possible to have the springs next to the wheel without going into the bed area (remember it has no rear wheel arches in the bed). Also there are no visible springs in photos of the rear suspension arm assembly, like on the F150. Accordingly, I do not believe that the rear fender "exo" will have much to do with load transfer, except for "possibly" (the photo would show otherwise) to provide rigidity for the bed. But to be honest, I'm not sure you want 100% rigidity at all, as some form of deflection is essential to keep both the weight and point stress loads to a minimum. You'd rather have something flex than break.
The other thing worth considering is that if they are using a cross linked airbag suspension setup, with active control (which is claimed), then we actually end up with the same contact patch force in even and uneven terrain, until it reaches the suspension stop. This is actually really important for off-roading, because it means that more of the wheels have more traction more of the time. If so then technically, it will only see individual wheel load spikes when it reaches the end of the suspension stroke.
The wheelbase and position of the rear axle also plays a roll in weight distribution, and in the case of the CT it has a long wheelbase (hence the 4WS) and the bed is nearly centrally placed under the bed. This has the effect that most of the weight placed in the back places most of the force on the rear axle, and given the limited size, and even width of the bed, those forces will predominantly go into the rear axle with most loads. So even if you only load the front of the bed up with cement, the long wheelbase acts as a lever, and rear axle as the fulcrum. Essentially the front of the vehicle acts as wheelbarrow handles.
Overall the existence of the cast and attached suspension structure would lead me to believe that any forces being applied to the wheels would have to already be more inboard to reach the spring bushings at all, meaning that the external cladding is not positioned well to offer much, if any, assistance.
The passenger compartment shouldn't be overlooked in this scenario as well, in that 6 heavy guys with tools etc, could add up to half of the payload in itself, even with an empty bed. The frunk volume of 2-300l could also be 250kg or so. The largest component between the front and rear axle to take up torsional load will be the cabin structure, and it also has the best ability to absorb some flex over the length of the cabin.
The above is of course for normal operation and is not a failure state, like in a collision where things need to absorb energy by plastically deforming and decelerate gradually at a low rate. Here, like most vehicles there are two ways to achieving this. One is be having deforming structures around the cabin safety cell like crumple zones etc, the other is to have deforming and compliant structures inside the safety cell, like seat belts and airbags. The trick there is that both operate in unison and augment eachother to keep the g-forces to a minimum without producing any nasty spikes.
Many vehicles intentionally make a rigid safety cell to impede ingress, and dissipate side intrusion by allowing the structure to bend around the impact, as the wheels loose traction and vehicle accelerates laterally away from the impact. The CT will also benefit here from the structural pack. Overall the interaction of crash forces are very dynamic, and depends on the type of crash, of which no two crashes, in reality, are the same. So often modelling these is one of the hardest parts of vehicle design, seeing that you need to make sure the vehicle still has functionality too. For this reason an EV platform, with small motors, and underfloor battery, actually make things considerably less difficult as there is more space to accommodate gradual deceleration rates, as is evident in Teslas safety rating.
Overall though, the crash components of the vehicle are focused around passenger survivability and injury, primarily at the cost of vehicle survivability. At that point the front fender "exo" might have some value, if it can deform in such a way to absorb energy.
Sponsored
Last edited: