I assumed you mean Polar MOI as it's the only one relevant to a car on a very general level.
Yes, you want to keep PMOI to a minimum as it improves steering response and a car that reacts to inputs faster = WIN
Your teacher was correct B, however there still might be something missing here, let me try it this way;Belatti wrote:Terry,
I was obviously talking about the polar mass moments of inertia. Arround the yaw (Z) axis to be precise. I name that "I" and to keep it simple -> M=I*ɤ (units Kg*m^2 in order to -> Nm = Kg*m^2 * 1/s^2)
Tyre grip forces (lateral)?Caito wrote:What I mean is, both in racquet, sword, or bat you have someone holding one side, while the other is loose.
In a car of which point are we taking about, the front.. the back??
Sorry, I used to write "rad" as a "1".xpensive wrote:
M = kg*m^2 * rad/s^2
When referring to angular speed in SI-units, "small-omega" is what is typically used. For angular accelleration, "omega-dot" or "Phi-dot-dot" will do. "Gamma" represents an angle if you ask me.Belatti wrote:Sorry, I used to write "rad" as a "1".xpensive wrote:
M = kg*m^2 * rad/s^2
Also, in the "phi dot-dot", I wrote "gamma" but I guess some PCs may show it wrong.
Do you not mean 'second moment of area'? The symbol (I) is the same, but I don't recall this being named 'moment of inertia'.riff_raff wrote:Belatti,
However, the term "moment of inertia" also can apply to structural member sectional properties. In regards to structural members, such as an F1 composite chassis tub in torsion or bending, having a higher structural moment of inertia would be very desirable. Since that would mean a more rigid chassis (remember basic Euler stress=Mc/I).
Best regards,
Terry
Perhaps Terry is confusing, Moment of Inertia (I) which relates to deflection (delta), with Bending Resistance (W) relating to stress (sigma)?bazanaius wrote:Do you not mean 'second moment of area'? The symbol (I) is the same, but I don't recall this being named 'moment of inertia'. Briff_raff wrote:Belatti,
However, the term "moment of inertia" also can apply to structural member sectional properties. In regards to structural members, such as an F1 composite chassis tub in torsion or bending, having a higher structural moment of inertia would be very desirable. Since that would mean a more rigid chassis (remember basic Euler stress=Mc/I).
Best regards,
Terry
Uhh.. says who.autogyro wrote:F1 eng
Is all this, why a three wheeled tadpole with FWD, no steering at the front and positive variable rear wheel camber, is better at road holding than any four wheeled vehicle?