New and Used Car Talk Reviews Hot Cars Comparison Automotive Community

The Largest Car Forum in the Philippines

Results 1 to 4 of 4
  1. Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Posts
    151
    #1
    which is better double wishbone or macpherson?

  2. Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Posts
    3,601
    #2
    Better for what?

    Handling - double wishbone (multi-link suspension is probably best)
    Ease of maintenance - McPherson strut (one less control arm to maintain)

    Check this out http://www.carbibles.com/suspension_bible.html

  3. Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Posts
    22,704
    #3
    Better is relative. The double wishbone is inherently superior, because of the way it can execute camber and toe changes in corners, but a McPherson-strut car can be made to handle almost as well as a double-wishbone car. The main advantage of McPherson systems is simplicity and low weight.

    The Civic was widely held to be one of the best handling front-wheel drive "commuter" cars of its time thanks to the double-wishbone setup. But other cars with McPhersons handle nearly as well or just as well. The Mazda Famila/Protege/Ford Lynx, for example, which use clever rear suspension geometry on their rear McPhersons (with trailing links) for improved handling, or, even better, the new Honda Fit/Jazz, which manages to drive very well despite having one of the worst possible suspension set-ups from a technical standpoint... front McPhersons and a rear beam axle suspension. Seems Honda got around the problems with rear beams by adding a good amount of toe-in under squat.

    But of course, all of this is relative and dependent on the car. For daily cars, McPhersons aren't a big handicap. But if you're making a sportscar and don't need the space-saving that McPhersons give, double-wishbone is the way to go.

    Ang pagbalik ng comeback...

  4. Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Posts
    1,906
    #4
    Which design is better? Neither.

    It's all in the tuning. You can waste a perfectly good double-wishbone setup with ridiculous damper and spring rates.

which is the better suspension?