I think I cant follow the formulas... can you explain the conversion factors and use the "tex" option, please?speedsense wrote:
Relate corner radius (and steering angle) to speed
Radius = (1.467 x mph)2(squared) divided by 32.167 x Lateral G's
The above formula shows that by multiplying steering angle by the square of speed is effective in correction. Though you are conspiring against Ackerman with this formula and tends to indicate too much steering, so the following works better.
Adjusted Steer= steering angle x mph x (square root of MPH).
Excellent handling graph for judging understeer, though it's not an absolute number thing but comparing the "gap" of this signal to the lateral G and knowing what the gap "looks" like with a neutral car.
Belatti, The first equation is simply the normal centripetal acceleration equation, written for "english" units, with a pair of brackets missing after the division symbol. Hence 1.467 is a rough conversion from mph to ft/sec, & 32.167 is go in ft/sec/sec. Implies that the Radius is defined in feet, speed in mph & LatG is in "go" units. Generalizing, it might properly be written,Belatti wrote:I think I cant follow the formulas... can you explain the conversion factors and use the "tex" option, please?
Is this right???
Yes and if I didn't explain myself well enough, it is best to use the second one "adjusted steer". And the resulting units should be considered a calculated dimensionless index, as the units do not directly relate to physical data.Belatti wrote:I think I cant follow the formulas... can you explain the conversion factors and use the "tex" option, please?speedsense wrote:
Relate corner radius (and steering angle) to speed
Radius = (1.467 x mph)2(squared) divided by 32.167 x Lateral G's
The above formula shows that by multiplying steering angle by the square of speed is effective in correction. Though you are conspiring against Ackerman with this formula and tends to indicate too much steering, so the following works better.
Adjusted Steer= steering angle x mph x (square root of MPH).
Excellent handling graph for judging understeer, though it's not an absolute number thing but comparing the "gap" of this signal to the lateral G and knowing what the gap "looks" like with a neutral car.
Is this right???
In my experience this is because of hardware, not because of software. Pi has a stranglehold on a variety of pro race series because their data logging hardware has been better than Motec's. If you log it with Pi hardware.. you have to analyze it in Toolbox, or export it for use in Matlab or something such.Electronics wrote:Toolbox has C# based metrics allowing users to create their own libraries.
Also, neither CDS nor Motec are ever used in Formula 1 racing for analysis. Most teams are obviously using Atlas or Toolbox.
Agreed, JT. I can see no reason to be overly suspicious of the steer angle trace, either.Jersey Tom wrote:I'd imagine that's instantaneous Ackermann angle, Dave... or the steering angle expected for a perfectly neutral car of a given wheelbase, at a given corner radius.
Steering trace doesn't look bad to me in terms of the sensor. Looks perfectly normal, typical of a somewhat neutral car... good balance at low speed though a tick free on initial throttle application, and definitely to the free side at high speed.
Thats the one.Jersey Tom wrote: or the steering angle expected for a perfectly neutral car of a given wheelbase, at a given corner radius.
And? Continue...Belatti wrote:Thats the one.Jersey Tom wrote: or the steering angle expected for a perfectly neutral car of a given wheelbase, at a given corner radius.
My concern is that while the calculated angle is, for example arround 3°, the steering wheel seems to be moving in the 0° to 90° range and thats arround 5° in the wheels... (not taking ackerman into account, that is rather parallel)
Jersey Tom wrote:In my experience this is because of hardware, not because of software. Pi has a stranglehold on a variety of pro race series because their data logging hardware has been better than Motec's. If you log it with Pi hardware.. you have to analyze it in Toolbox, or export it for use in Matlab or something such.Electronics wrote:Toolbox has C# based metrics allowing users to create their own libraries.
Also, neither CDS nor Motec are ever used in Formula 1 racing for analysis. Most teams are obviously using Atlas or Toolbox.
From purely a software perspective I'd much rather take Motec over Pi... though with some spare time, Matlab is king since you can write whatever you want with it!
If you've got a free or loose racecar I sure wouldn't be surprised to see that kind of steering input.Belatti wrote:I should install a camera to actually watch driver steering wheel input... but I dont think he moves the wheel 90° in rather plain and constant radio curves.