COG =/= weight distribution, COG is affected by where weight is placed, you can have weight distribution within regulations yet have different COG. This is because cars are not flat, they're 3 dimensional entities higher or lower placement of components affect COG.Rodak wrote: ↑11 Apr 2022, 00:49With the front/rear weight balance defined by the rules (see my post above) the fore/aft position of c.g. is also defined. Moving the c.g. of a legal car rearwards would increase the rear weight and reduce the front weight making the car illegal if the tolerance of 0.440 front and 0.540 rear was exceeded. This doesn't leave much room for manipulation.Perhaps the mechanical setup is built for oversteer, and the aero balance is built for understeer by having the COG and COP far rearwards.
Case in point, boxer engines change the COG vs an inline or V engine, even if they weigh the same because the boxer is low and wide it changes the COG vs an inline engine that has the mass concentrated in a smaller area.
The Tesla has good handling despite its massive curb weight because the COG is very low.