Could that be their secret for their great race pace?marcush. wrote:the only car not sporting anti ackerman is the Lotus AFAIK
Could that be their secret for their great race pace?marcush. wrote:the only car not sporting anti ackerman is the Lotus AFAIK
If I were an FSAE design judge or scrutineer on that car (clue I have been both) then that system would receive a very thorough investigation. Bolted joints on spindles in the steering system are inherently unsafe, you would have to overdesign and incorporate redundancy. By all means build a development spindle that you can adjust, but for contests you should commit to a fixed steering arm on the spindle. Quite why you are adjusting ackerman at the outboard end is something only you know.marcush. wrote:sorry it is really really easy -as tom said :
You could for examble fix outer joint of the toelink to the upright by using a bracket .This bracket could be bolted to a corresponding surface of the upright .By adding and removing shims you can alter the position of the svivelpoint towards more or less ackerman.
Even on pro racecars there can be an immense amount of adjustment built into... just about anything. Steering system, control arm pickups, what have you. Various means of doing it, practical and safe.Greg Locock wrote:If I were an FSAE design judge or scrutineer on that car (clue I have been both) then that system would receive a very thorough investigation. Bolted joints on spindles in the steering system are inherently unsafe, you would have to overdesign and incorporate redundancy. By all means build a development spindle that you can adjust, but for contests you should commit to a fixed steering arm on the spindle. Quite why you are adjusting ackerman at the outboard end is something only you know.marcush. wrote:sorry it is really really easy -as tom said :
You could for examble fix outer joint of the toelink to the upright by using a bracket .This bracket could be bolted to a corresponding surface of the upright .By adding and removing shims you can alter the position of the svivelpoint towards more or less ackerman.
Race tires aren't allowed on public roads either. Nor many things. OEM world is just completely different.Greg Locock wrote:In my day job a bolt on steering arm would not allowed to be driven on public roads, and even on the proving ground tracks the car would have to be tagged.
i´m a bit curious now...how would YOU attach the steering rod to the hub -a flexure ? At some point you just need a bolt or something to keep the assy serviceable.Greg Locock wrote:I didn't say i wouldn't let it pass, I implied I would want to see a lot of proof it was a safe design and well made. In my day job a bolt on steering arm would not allowed to be driven on public roads, and even on the proving ground tracks the car would have to be tagged.
to drive around the block ,participate at Indy 500 or in a autcross? it can´t be the same for all? Or would you say it´s just not worth it?Billzilla wrote:Just give the car about 75% Ackerman, it will be as close to as good as it's going to ever get.
marcush. wrote:to drive around the block ,participate at Indy 500 or in a autcross? it can´t be the same for all? Or would you say it´s just not worth it?Billzilla wrote:Just give the car about 75% Ackerman, it will be as close to as good as it's going to ever get.
I have the feeling this is more important on light low powered cars negotiating tight twisty tracks with corners over 90° on a high speed track with only fast corners at the same radius the effect will tend to zero...
but just how much could you expect to gain?
My 2 cents : if your car does not have balance or grip and a soft chassis to begin with the effect might be not even nticeable on the watch or for the driver to feel .Maybe your tyre wants exactly what the designer has specified .but given the wide range of possible ackerman settings this is unlikely .But I would not expect miracles coming from this ...It´s a finishing touch to a well sorted machine.Priority C or D and something a small team never ever will have time or recources to untap.
It´s a bit like Marrussia or HRT thinking about kers...you are 3or 4 seconds behind and KERS might buy you 3 tenths ...but you have to BUY it as you don´t have any inhouse expertise .So this is something to make others more wealthy and will not add much to your knowledge base...so leave it alone till you see it is the last bit that stops you from scoring ...
I’m missing your point. It would seem that Ackerman would be required by steel wheels on a rubber surface (high friction) rather than gravel (low friction)Greg Locock wrote:Ackerman only needs to be 100% if you are driving steel tired carriage wheels on gravel driveways.
Ackerman varies with steering wheel angle, so you need to decide what shape the curve is. if you plot wheel 'fight' vs ackerman angle for real tires you'll find that 100% ackerman is not a particularly good target for anything.