Belatti wrote:Lets define Downforce first. To me it means this:
Downforce is the force applied to the wheel hub and comunicated to the ground via the tire in the direction to the ground.
It is composed by:
1- vehicle weight (proportional to vehicle mass)
2- aerodinamical loads
3- weight trasference (longitudinal while braking/accelerating and lateral while cornering)
While point no.1 only contributes to downforce, points no. 2 and 3 can go up or down, increasing or decreasing total downforce.
Jersey Tom was talking about point no. 3 but missed the fact that you can neutralize rolling and pitching moments with suspension geometry configuration.
Yep, a car with a higher CoG can pitch and roll less than a similar car with lower CoG if you change suspension geometry! However this "anti" features are not that good because they bring other issues.
The main contribution of a Lower CoG is to decrease the weight transference and so have a more even downforce in all the wheels.
Downforce to me is aerodynamic load. I call the 3 things you mentioned "Normal load" at the tire contact patch, meaning the vertical force applied to the tire by all the means mentioned. C of G height does not affect aeroload in direct relation. It could be due to secondary packaging relation that allows you to have more or less downforce, but thats exactly it, it could be more more or less. Take RBR for example, with the pull rod it "might" have a lower CofG, which gives it less diffuser volume, but it "might" have a more effective rear wing that gives it more downforce because of the lower rear deck height. Just like Brawn might have more downforce because of the possibly higher C of G because they moved some components higher to get a more effective DDD, but might lose out on the effectiveness of the rear wing. Key difference between downforce compare to other normal load, is that it has no inertia or mass associated to it(aside from the mass added from aerodynamic devices, but in a weight limited formula, it means nothing), which gives you the benefit of added normal load on the tire(which tire likes, up to a point), without the problem of accelerating mass.
No one here is saying that C of G height does not effect how the car handles, because that would be a silly thing to say, but to answer the question posted, it does not meaningfully affect downforce.