It absolutely is, but I've never heard of a system like this and and wanted to make it just to see what would happen. I feel like there would be another level of control as there is a physical linkage between the front and the rear. No shock/spring is able to relate the vertical position of the front wheel to the rear wheel and vice versa. Do you think this would have any beneficial effect?
The idea sounds good but does not sound practical if I am being honest. As someone who competes. I want my car to be simple with no added complexity.
I understand the benefit of wanted to control the front to rear yaw motions.
However this kind of idea would come at the cost of:
1 - space, I think the packaging of this would be hard to accomplish
2 - more linkages = more parts to fail, inspect, and maintain
3 - weight, even a lightweight material would add up given the length needed
This comes from an idiot who just drives, competes a little and does not have any college degree. So take it with that grain of salt.
If I was to make a suggestion for Fiesta ST suspension engineering, I think time would be better spent on ideas like:
1 - Billet front up rights, could allow for more caster, tie rod location, potentially 4x100 and 5x114.3 hubs
2 - spherical tie rods - this would be simple and low engineering needed
3 - custom rear twist beam - I know the twist beam could be lighter but the rigidity will affect lateral load.
In a perfect world, I think a custom twist beam with maybe some easy to sway bars would be awesome
This would require the most research and engineering. But I think it would be the coolest, I imagine a small handful of drivers in here would love less unsprung weight with easy to swap rotation.
(Again I'm just a dummy that spends money on an SE lol)