Please answer this question

Tags
Question

8 Comments

  • Log in to leave a comment
  • Profile image
    13.8k Vedhaspace

    @OmniExplorationDivision okay thanks

    +1 2.8 years ago
  • Profile image

    @Vedhaspace
    I forgot to mention that should you need to modify stability,
    be sure to start with one part at a time.
    Sounds trivial but believe me you can get carried away with tinkering stability if you're not doing any test runs.

    2.8 years ago
  • Profile image
    13.8k Vedhaspace

    @HorizonsTechnologies okay

    2.8 years ago
  • Profile image

    @Vedhaspace yes but if you want your shock to not move increase damper.

    2.8 years ago
  • Profile image
    13.8k Vedhaspace

    @HorizonsTechnologies can it make my shock stable?

    2.8 years ago
  • Profile image
    13.8k Vedhaspace

    @OmniExplorationDivision thanks

    +1 2.8 years ago
  • Profile image

    Play with it and you will soon see its importance.
    Its good for articulated limbs and things that have many connections.
    I made a spider walk once and the limbs were too sloppy so I had to modify their stability due to having so many hinges and rotators involved.
    Another time I was doing a rover with 14 independent wheels and they all needed stability set different from each other so it would ride well.
    Basically, you want the stability to be stronger for the hinges closest to the body and weaker the further away they are from the body.
    This balances how much torque is put into the movements and can minimize things like bouncing and over movement.

    2.8 years ago
  • Profile image

    its a modifier that modifies stability

    +1 2.8 years ago

No Upvotes

Log in in to upvote this post.