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A Bose Suspension? ("the first mega-breakthrough in car suspensions")
Automobile ^ | 9/04 | Jean Jennings

Posted on 09/14/2004 4:42:37 AM PDT by Aquinasfan

We have just returned from The Mountain (AKA Bose Corporation Headquarters in Framingham, Massachusetts) where we witnessed the first mega-breakthrough in car suspensions since the gas-pressurized shock. Is that hyperbolic enough for you? Well, it's impossible to overstate what the brilliant Fulbright Scholar and longtime MIT professor Dr. Amar Bose and his engineers have accomplished in the black magic arts of ride and handling.

The premise was simple: Develop a suspension system that would offer the magic carpet ride of a fine luxury automobile, yet provide the crisp handling of a high-performance sports car. Simple premise, yet seemingly insurmountable (and senseless) task given that the active suspension systems designed by savvy engineers at companies such as Lotus, Infiniti, and Mercedes-Benz in the past two decades have all since been discontinued.

While other, lesser systems have come and gone, the Bose Corporation, known more for its ubiquitous Wave radio and blessed acoustic noise-canceling headphones than for automotive engineering, has beavered away in virtual secrecy for an impossibly long twenty-four years on its own version of the active suspension. (Let's pause a moment to appreciate that any company would have a well of optimism deep enough to sustain a research project for more than two decades. "I would have been fired several times," chortles Dr. Bose, chairman and chief technical officer of the privately-held company into which he has always plowed 100% of profits back into development and growth.)

Behind it all is Dr. Bose's lifelong fascination with air and hydraulic suspensions, which grew from a Pontiac he bought in 1957, to a Citroen he bought in Paris in 1967, to finally formalizing suspension research at BOSE in 1980. "I gave that Citroen suspension system as a quiz in acoustics to my students," Dr. Bose says. "The same mathematic principles apply."

Click here to see Project Sound in action. This video supplied by Bose.

Apply them, they did. Having decided after five years of mathematical research that suspensions could be improved dramatically enough to make the journey worth it, Bose soldiered on, focusing on electromagnetics as the key to success. Never mind that high-efficiency, fast, high-power linear motors did not exist. Never mind that high-efficiency, high-power amplifiers to drive those non-existent motors would need to be developed. Never mind that control algorithms would need to be developed to stabilize the motors. Never mind that the super-quick microcomputers needed to run the whole shooting match also didn't exist. Bose took on the first three daunting tasks and bet on the industry to come up with the fourth.

The patents have now been filed. Project Sound is very nearly ready for prime time, and it is nothing short of revolutionary.

The heart of the Bose suspension system is a linear electromagnetic motor installed at each wheel in a modified McPherson strut arrangement. When electricity is fed to wire coils inside, the motor expands and contracts so quickly and forcefully that it prevents pitch and roll during times when the car is driven hard, all the while maintaining passenger car isolation from the sort of wheel impacts that would typically slam your head to the ceiling. Anti-roll bars are no longer necessary. The bobbing-head dog for the parcel shelf is obsolete.

The new design is modular, allowing Bose engineers to easily retrofit existing cars with four independent modules (fronts incorporate a two-piece lower control arm, wheel damper mounted inside the wheel, and torsion bar; rears include wheel dampers and suspension links, with electromagnetic motors laid out more in double-wishbone fashion) mounted in aluminum cradles directly to original suspension sub-system attachment points. A belt-driven alternator powers the system and its twelve-volt battery.

The Bose-equipped car (below) has far better body control than the standard car (above).

To witness the miracle, we were strapped into a retrofitted Lexus LS400 perched atop a Bose-designed ride simulator (itself an engineering tour de force that will most likely replace the towering three-story edifices currently used by car companies around the world). The initial experience programmed into the simulator emulated a terribly choppy road with a whole lot of high frequency energy "exciting" the wheels. Butts wiggled and stomachs hopped up and down. It was a buckboard. A martini shaker. The research engineers working the controls were just a little too jolly watching the journalists shaken, not stirred.

Next, in Bose mode, we attacked the same horrid road, but inside the passenger compartment, we were sailing along on a cruise ship. The teensiest of cradle rock. Looking at a mirror on an adjacent wall of the garage, we could see our LS400's tires chattering and bashing along, as if they belonged to another car, not the one in which we were blissfully rocking along. It was mind-boggling, unbelievably astonishing, no less than earth shattering.

Outside, we witnessed two test drivers take a basic LS400 and a Bose-retrofitted LS400 through a series of side-by-side tests that allowed us to see the performance angle of the equation. In a double lane-change maneuver, going through a bump course, and being thrown aggressively into a deep corner, the Bose-equipped Lexus remained unnervingly flat, with not a hint of body pitch or roll.

Then the Bose Lexus rushed up to a curb in the middle of the lot and jumped through the air, hurdling it neatly. The crowd roared. The driver got out and bowed. The empty car next to him bowed, too. Body pitch (and its opposite!) on demand, as it were. The wonders of mathematics.

The patents have been filed, and the engineering continues, with Bose promising a weight reduction of fifty percent in the next six months.

When will it be ready? "In 1990, I said two years," remembers Dr. Bose. "Within the next six to ten months, I'll be in a position to select a manufacturer, only one, to team with. We have to focus on its perfection. But don't anticipate it coming down to a low-priced car. They're low-priced for a reason.

"But Bose will manufacture it. It is an enormous amount of technology and we want to follow it through."

How much went into developing the Bose system? "You want me to get fired?" shouts Dr. Bose. "I'm embarrassed to say! You can imagine!"

What you can't imagine is the astonishingly silken ride and the remarkable level of handling achievable without compromise in the same vehicle.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: bose
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Who said nothing good can come out of Massachusetts ;-)
1 posted on 09/14/2004 4:42:37 AM PDT by Aquinasfan
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Video of cars fitted with the Bose Suspension here.
2 posted on 09/14/2004 4:43:55 AM PDT by Aquinasfan (Isaiah 22:22, Rev 3:7, Mat 16:19)
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To: Aquinasfan
But don't anticipate it coming down to a low-priced car. They're low-priced for a reason.

Oh, well.

3 posted on 09/14/2004 4:45:14 AM PDT by mewzilla
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To: Aquinasfan

Time to buy Bose stock.


4 posted on 09/14/2004 4:45:46 AM PDT by SVTCobra03 (You can never have enough friends, horsepower or ammunition.)
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To: SVTCobra03
Time to buy Bose stock.

Privately held.

Check out the Quicktime movies. They're jaw-dropping.

5 posted on 09/14/2004 4:47:01 AM PDT by Aquinasfan (Isaiah 22:22, Rev 3:7, Mat 16:19)
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To: SVTCobra03

It's a privately-held company.


6 posted on 09/14/2004 4:48:46 AM PDT by Poohbah (If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much room.)
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To: Aquinasfan
From the website:

Comparison of Factory-Installed and Bose® Suspension System Two vehicles of the same make and model are driven over a bump course at night.

The vehicle on the top has the original factory-installed suspension, and the vehicle on the bottom has the Bose suspension system. Both vehicles are being driven at the same speed.

7 posted on 09/14/2004 4:50:47 AM PDT by Rebelbase (Partisan Political Operative)
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To: Aquinasfan
Let's pause a moment to appreciate that any company would have a well of optimism deep enough to sustain a research project for more than two decades.

No wonder Bose is so 'lucky'. Luck is defined as the intersection of opportunity and preparation. God bless America.

/john

8 posted on 09/14/2004 4:53:57 AM PDT by JRandomFreeper
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To: JRandomFreeper
No wonder Bose is so 'lucky'.

Dr. Bose is an engineer patterned after Thomas Edison. There's no substitute for perseverance and hard work, especially in applied science.

9 posted on 09/14/2004 4:57:24 AM PDT by Aquinasfan (Isaiah 22:22, Rev 3:7, Mat 16:19)
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To: JRandomFreeper

BUMP


10 posted on 09/14/2004 5:01:12 AM PDT by Publius6961 (I don't do diplomacy either)
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To: Aquinasfan

Bose suspension?

Will it make my CD's sound better?


11 posted on 09/14/2004 5:01:32 AM PDT by PBRSTREETGANG
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To: Aquinasfan
HEY CADILLAC !...ARE YOU LISTENING?
12 posted on 09/14/2004 5:01:33 AM PDT by Khurkris (Proud Scottish/HillBilly - We perfected "The Art of the Grudge")
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To: Aquinasfan
That's why I defined 'luck'. Or as one wag put it.. 'The harder I work, the luckier I gets'

/john

13 posted on 09/14/2004 5:03:05 AM PDT by JRandomFreeper
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To: Khurkris
HEY CADILLAC !...ARE YOU LISTENING?

Amen to that!

Mike

14 posted on 09/14/2004 5:12:02 AM PDT by MichaelP
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To: JRandomFreeper

I know a couple engineers for Bose. They don't care if you have a degree or not, you just have to be smart, very smart.

The amount of dollars they pumped into research was amazing. They would spend a year or more with prototype GM cars making the sound system perfect.

If it's Bose, it's as close to perfect as you can get.


15 posted on 09/14/2004 5:12:33 AM PDT by Fierce Allegiance ( "Stay safe in the "sandbox", cuz!)
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To: Aquinasfan

This sounds a great deal like a suspension used by a company that does some R&D for many of our military vehicles. That company has developed a, for lack of a better word, shock, that is a slurry of metal particles that changes density according to ride demands. The shock material can change from density of water to a solid in an instant.
I don't remember the name of the company. I became aware of it while watching a Discovery Channel show.


16 posted on 09/14/2004 5:14:42 AM PDT by em2vn
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To: Aquinasfan

Bose = nice but costly stuff (5 bills for a table radio). I guess somebody is buying those Wave radios that Paul Harvey pitches.


17 posted on 09/14/2004 5:19:45 AM PDT by asgardshill (By direct order, I LOVE ALAN KEYES!)
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To: Aquinasfan
Wow.

Bose must be a conservative- his ads have run for years in American Spectator, National Review & The Washington Times.

Yes Virginia, there are Conservatives in the peoples republic of massachusetts.

I know- I grew up there one town away from the Bose shop in Framingham.

Can't buy Bose stock but, we can buy Bose stuff as we divest our viacom (cbs) stock.

I hope we Freepers are doing both!

AC

18 posted on 09/14/2004 5:22:12 AM PDT by Atomic Comet (www.aroostookbeauty.com)
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To: em2vn

bump! I love Bose stuff.


19 posted on 09/14/2004 5:25:32 AM PDT by Big Giant Head ( < Roast Pork?!?>)
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To: Atomic Comet
Wow.

The appropriate reaction.

An interesting angle on this for conservatives is the project development time. Dr. Bose owns the company and could afford a 24-year product development cycle. What does this say about the publicly-held corporate model?

Maybe the existing mix of privately and publicly held corporations is best, since I can see advantages and disadvantages to both.

20 posted on 09/14/2004 5:32:49 AM PDT by Aquinasfan (Isaiah 22:22, Rev 3:7, Mat 16:19)
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