Hi once more!
There's one more mystery I've been unable to reveal which concerns tire wear and dirt on tires. And once more Aston National + the FZR serves me well for demonstrating that which I cannot explain with my limited knowledge of car dynamics.
In the beginning of the straight one usually cuts the chicane to carry more speed on to the straight. In the process, the left front and rear tire get dirty because there's a little sandy area next to the curb. The dirt pickup is uneven (more dirt on the rear compared to the front) but it also seems that the rate at which the front and rear tires become clean again is not balanced.
In the end of the straight the dirtier rear tires are completely clean while the front tires have some more problems shaking off the rest of the dirt.
I was thinking that it might have to do with the weight distribution of the car and thus more weight in the rear of the car would cause more tire scrub. But this doesn't make much sense to me...
It can't be excessive tire spin because there's actually no rear tire spin on the long straight. The rear tires are gradually getting cleaner a lot faster by just going down the straight at 200 Kp/h+.
Now I'd like to know why this happens and I'd be delighted if any of you had some ideas about this
As I love screenshots, I've attached three of those :P
biggie
There's one more mystery I've been unable to reveal which concerns tire wear and dirt on tires. And once more Aston National + the FZR serves me well for demonstrating that which I cannot explain with my limited knowledge of car dynamics.
In the beginning of the straight one usually cuts the chicane to carry more speed on to the straight. In the process, the left front and rear tire get dirty because there's a little sandy area next to the curb. The dirt pickup is uneven (more dirt on the rear compared to the front) but it also seems that the rate at which the front and rear tires become clean again is not balanced.
In the end of the straight the dirtier rear tires are completely clean while the front tires have some more problems shaking off the rest of the dirt.
I was thinking that it might have to do with the weight distribution of the car and thus more weight in the rear of the car would cause more tire scrub. But this doesn't make much sense to me...
It can't be excessive tire spin because there's actually no rear tire spin on the long straight. The rear tires are gradually getting cleaner a lot faster by just going down the straight at 200 Kp/h+.
Now I'd like to know why this happens and I'd be delighted if any of you had some ideas about this
As I love screenshots, I've attached three of those :P
biggie