I have been thinking about this for the last few years, and the Just Aircraft Super Stol thread has brought this subject to the forefront. What is possible with an Off Airport airplane if we had better suspension? Big aired down bushwheels do a good job of soaking things up, but what about when I want to land a logging road with a water bar cut in it, or a gravel bar that has a ditch from a stream running through the middle of it? When I am riding or driving offroad in the desert, I usually find myself wondering if I could land different sections of the trail, but many times, the ground is just to rough. One or two bumps, or whoops would be fine, but what about a 150ft section of 12-18" tall bumps? Or how about just soaking up a bad landing without a bounce resulting?
Just aircraft, the RAGE suspension, AOSS, etc have been toying with dampened suspension and this is interesting to me, but why is everyone hanging it out in the wind? Road race cars have been using pushrod suspension for years to keep the shocks out of the airstream and package them in a more centralized location for weight distribution. It seems that this would be possible with an airplane in the seat truss etc. and still be able to achieve "long travel" and highly adjustable dampening for a bushplane.
There is a lot of R&D that goes into every one of these cars to make them handle at speed in the rough. Airplanes wouldn't have the issue of building heat in the shocks because they should only be on the ground a few hundred feet at a time, so the shocks could be smaller/lighter and hold a lot less oil.
Other than approach angle of the tire to an obstacle, could we get the same performance out of 31" tires as we get with 35's if we had better suspension travel and dampening? Or is there another factor????
A basic example of pushrod suspension.