Apart from a tiny amount of toe out would have such a drastic effect on the tyres, life and grip and almost nothing on the aero.
The aero is there to load the tyres and help them out, not vice versa.
You can safely use around half a degree of toe out without affecting tire life, contact patch is not affected by toe, only camber. Last generation cars used a lot of toe out, you could tell from the outer edge blistering in some races in 2018.
yet more of godl's nonsense !godlameroso wrote: ↑30 Mar 2022, 04:32Half a degree of toe is roughly 50mm that you've moved the trailing edge of the tire closer to the car. Stick your hand out the window of a moving car and turn your hand 50mm is the aero force significant? What if your hand was the size of the wheel assembly?
We are both wrong.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑30 Mar 2022, 09:03yet more of godl's nonsense !godlameroso wrote: ↑30 Mar 2022, 04:32Half a degree of toe is roughly 50mm that you've moved the trailing edge of the tire closer to the car. Stick your hand out the window of a moving car and turn your hand 50mm is the aero force significant? What if your hand was the size of the wheel assembly?
half a degree of toe is roughly 5mm
toe is slip
with half a degree of slip the tyre will generate roughly 0.5 - 1 'g' worth of side-force - that's a lot of force
No, it's not. Don't look at every part of the floor separately. The diffusor can still suck air in from the sides and air can still travel outside behind the frontwheels.
One, your maths is massively out.godlameroso wrote: ↑30 Mar 2022, 04:32You can safely use around half a degree of toe out without affecting tire life, contact patch is not affected by toe, only camber. Last generation cars used a lot of toe out, you could tell from the outer edge blistering in some races in 2018.
Half a degree of toe is roughly 50mm that you've moved the trailing edge of the tire closer to the car. Stick your hand out the window of a moving car and turn your hand 50mm is the aero force significant? What if your hand was the size of the wheel assembly?
godlameroso wrote: ↑30 Mar 2022, 12:42We are both wrong.
https://robrobinette.com/images/S2000/A ... anual4.jpg
.24 degrees = 1/4 inch of toe which equals 6mm.
Half a degree is 12mm.
And if both tires have the same toe there is zero thrust steer.
If what I say is nonsense then how come I was right about the Mercedes car not being very good?
The 0.24 is not degrees, it's inches. 6mm is 0.24in. There are no degrees in that set up information.godlameroso wrote: ↑30 Mar 2022, 12:42We are both wrong.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑30 Mar 2022, 09:03yet more of godl's nonsense !godlameroso wrote: ↑30 Mar 2022, 04:32Half a degree of toe is roughly 50mm that you've moved the trailing edge of the tire closer to the car. Stick your hand out the window of a moving car and turn your hand 50mm is the aero force significant? What if your hand was the size of the wheel assembly?
half a degree of toe is roughly 5mm
toe is slip
with half a degree of slip the tyre will generate roughly 0.5 - 1 'g' worth of side-force - that's a lot of force
https://robrobinette.com/images/S2000/A ... anual4.jpg
.24 degrees = 1/4 inch of toe which equals 6mm.
Half a degree is 12mm.
And if both tires have the same toe there is zero thrust steer.
If what I say is nonsense then how come I was right about the Mercedes car not being very good?
Yep. When I was racing FF2000 we had issues generating heat in the front tires. The solution was to change the toe. Worked a charm.....Five, toe settings generate more heat and wear than the camber settings you'd run sensibly ever does, by an order of magnitude
degrees and inches are really close that you can call a quarter degree about a quarter inch. A 1 foot diameter circle has a 3.14 foot radius, 12x3.14 = 37.68 inches 360 degrees in a circle. Off by one golden ratio.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑30 Mar 2022, 13:38The 0.24 is not degrees, it's inches. 6mm is 0.24in. There are no degrees in that set up information.godlameroso wrote: ↑30 Mar 2022, 12:42We are both wrong.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑30 Mar 2022, 09:03
yet more of godl's nonsense !
half a degree of toe is roughly 5mm
toe is slip
with half a degree of slip the tyre will generate roughly 0.5 - 1 'g' worth of side-force - that's a lot of force
https://robrobinette.com/images/S2000/A ... anual4.jpg
.24 degrees = 1/4 inch of toe which equals 6mm.
Half a degree is 12mm.
And if both tires have the same toe there is zero thrust steer.
If what I say is nonsense then how come I was right about the Mercedes car not being very good?
When was the last time you saw a wheel and tyre that was 1ft in circumferencegodlameroso wrote: ↑30 Mar 2022, 17:05
degrees and inches are really close that you can call a quarter degree about a quarter inch. A 1 foot diameter circle has a 3.14 foot radius, 12x3.14 = 37.68 inches 360 degrees in a circle. Off by one golden ratio.
Lol that's for a wheel tire combo that's a similar diameter to what F1 runs. Removing tire squirt from the equation is worth a lot, it doesn't suddenly stop mattering just because you don't like me. I don't like you and I can admit when you have a point.PhillipM wrote: ↑30 Mar 2022, 13:32godlameroso wrote: ↑30 Mar 2022, 12:42We are both wrong.
https://robrobinette.com/images/S2000/A ... anual4.jpg
.24 degrees = 1/4 inch of toe which equals 6mm.
Half a degree is 12mm.
And if both tires have the same toe there is zero thrust steer.
If what I say is nonsense then how come I was right about the Mercedes car not being very good?
You do realise those numbers only apply for the S2000 with that specific wheel and tyre combo, right? You can't just nick the numbers out of your service manual and expect them to apply to every vehicle?
Any sort of performance car needing a full length diffuser is going to be on slicks that generate peak grip at a couple percent of slip, not the 8-10% of a road tyre.
So yes, adding half a degree to the rear tyres of toe out to generate tenths of a percent of aero loading extra is pretty insane.
it doesn't matter, the proportion is the same. 2/1 is the same if you have 16/8 or 512/256.PhillipM wrote: ↑30 Mar 2022, 17:12When was the last time you saw a wheel and tyre that was 1ft in circumferencegodlameroso wrote: ↑30 Mar 2022, 17:05
degrees and inches are really close that you can call a quarter degree about a quarter inch. A 1 foot diameter circle has a 3.14 foot radius, 12x3.14 = 37.68 inches 360 degrees in a circle. Off by one golden ratio.