Basically what I am stuck on is pressure. The way I am picturing it is, you need a certain amount of pressure to overcome the force of the car.(Which would be mass when the car lifting from still, but mass and acceleration if it's is falling back down from hopping...right?
).
Now when you have already reached that pressure, what happens when you add more? Will there be a significant, or any performance increase? What I am getting at is, would it be wiser to use that additional energy to create more volume? A real world example that I can imagine would be a performance gain after swaping to a larger gear.(Which = less pressure, more volume.)
Smaller gears are less strain on the motor and what powers the motor.
Using larger gears, causes more stress on the motor and batteries (if we keep the cylinder ID the same)
If you can maintain the same stress on the system, then volume over pressure would work.
Once you have the pressure to begin raising the car, (approx 1000PSI and depending on cylinder ID), all you need from there on is volume. - Massive amounts of volume like with tandem gear heads.
Now you get more flow, but at what expense? The motor needs the power or batteries to over come the torque needed to pump more fluid.
So the average motor most likely will not work, you install a 50HP VDC motor, with the required power/batteries/amps and it's works. So if your plan is to hop higher, (not faster) volume is what is needed at all phases of hopping. Notice how the motor kind of whines or wheezes just as the switch is hit, its the motor stressing. (IMO) Use a much higher HP motor and (IMO), you will not hear that. or what I like, is high torque and high speed motor.
So, it's the motor that can not handle the stress, you over come the needed amps by increasing the volts.
To me pressure is like filling a void. Too much void and very little happens. Too much pressure is like a bomb, so lets use volume over pressure. It's safer.