boyracer wrote:I'm modelling this for the Silverstone circuit - according to information I found on the F1 website, most teams tend to run their car with a stiff front end and a softer rear end around the track. Hence trying to find approximate values for a stiff front end and softer rear end.
As a general rule, your roll stiffness will be front biased. Typically your total load transfer distribution is designed to be about 5% higher than your front weight distribution. This requires higher roll stiffness at the front.
If we make some assumtions:
mass 605kg 40% front
CGh 220mm
track 1400m (avg)
Ay 5G (copse and becketts)
this gives weight transfer of:
(5G x 9.81 x 605kg x 220mm)/1400mm ---> approx 4660N
If we assume this is distributed 45% front by the suspension design, your wheel loads are;
3284N -909N
4343N -782N
Add 1500kg of downforce equally to front and rear:
17999N 13805N
19058N 13932N
Oh and to answer your original question on the roll stiffness. to get the load transfer distribution of 5% higher than the weight distribution your roll stiffness will divided front/rear in a "similar" proportion. So that would be 45% front.
If our car above rolls 2.5deg at the said 5G, then your roll stiffness is:
roll moment of (5G x 9.81 x 605kg x 220mm)/2.5deg
2611Nm/deg
with 1175Nm/deg at the front (45%) and 1436Nm/deg at the rear.
This is a very basic calc which doessnt take into account different track widths front and rear and roll centres are assumed on the ground. In addition to this I havent checked to see if its actually correct!
You should be able to confirm these numbers to yourself after a little research on roll theory. I canät think of any net resources for this right now though.
Tim