Hello everybody,
I was trying to understand the very physical sense of most of the FWD cars being prone to understeer, but some things are getting too far.
http://www.suv-rollovers.com/a ... tions/understeer-01292010
According to this website:
A front-heavy vehicle with low rear roll stiffness (from soft springing and/or undersized or nonexistent rear anti-roll bars) will have a tendency to terminal understeer: its front tires, being more heavily loaded even in the static condition, will reach the limits of their adhesion before the rear tires, and thus will develop larger slip angles. Front-wheel drive cars are also prone to understeer because not only are they usually front-heavy, transmitting power through the front wheels also reduces their grip available for cornering.
To make things less complicated, let's talk about the car not accelerating or braking at all, just entering the corner. I've thought the higher the load on the front tires, the higher the grip. As it turns out, somebody forgot to mention (in my opinion) the important suspension settings factor.
In FXO, for example, the weight distribution is as follows: 57 front, 43 rear. When the car is turning right, the weight is going to the left more to the front of the car than, as the centrifugal force is higher, but at the same time the maximum friction the front can generate is higher than on the rear. We all know that when this max. friction is e.g. two times higher when the centrifugal force is two times higher. To prevent mentioned weight transfer, I set minimum anti roll on the rear and the maximum in the front. 57F and 43R on the paper doesn't seem to make a very big difference, however the car is still very understeery, as the first wheels losing grip are the front ones. Can anyone get me through this?
I was trying to understand the very physical sense of most of the FWD cars being prone to understeer, but some things are getting too far.
http://www.suv-rollovers.com/a ... tions/understeer-01292010
According to this website:
A front-heavy vehicle with low rear roll stiffness (from soft springing and/or undersized or nonexistent rear anti-roll bars) will have a tendency to terminal understeer: its front tires, being more heavily loaded even in the static condition, will reach the limits of their adhesion before the rear tires, and thus will develop larger slip angles. Front-wheel drive cars are also prone to understeer because not only are they usually front-heavy, transmitting power through the front wheels also reduces their grip available for cornering.
To make things less complicated, let's talk about the car not accelerating or braking at all, just entering the corner. I've thought the higher the load on the front tires, the higher the grip. As it turns out, somebody forgot to mention (in my opinion) the important suspension settings factor.
In FXO, for example, the weight distribution is as follows: 57 front, 43 rear. When the car is turning right, the weight is going to the left more to the front of the car than, as the centrifugal force is higher, but at the same time the maximum friction the front can generate is higher than on the rear. We all know that when this max. friction is e.g. two times higher when the centrifugal force is two times higher. To prevent mentioned weight transfer, I set minimum anti roll on the rear and the maximum in the front. 57F and 43R on the paper doesn't seem to make a very big difference, however the car is still very understeery, as the first wheels losing grip are the front ones. Can anyone get me through this?