Ciro Pabón wrote: So, another answer to Roland clever point could be that you can have large torque and produce a large force but if your wheels doesn't increase the rotation rate more quickly you will lose. The original question is about slip, not acceleration (although I know the former brings the later, so...).
Again
I think everyone is messing all up with this.Belatti wrote:"The power injected by a torque depends only on the instantaneous angular speed – not on whether the angular speed increases, decreases, or remains constant while the torque is being applied"
Power and torque being in the same lineal ecuation and cars having gears, who gives a damn about one or the other?
A tyre, like everyting else in this world is a mass-spring-damper system. Or a combination of several of those systems if you will. Well, the longitudinal "slip" component of the M-S-D in the middle between rim and the ground has coefficients in its ecuation that can describe friction characteristics. The whole system, like any other M-S-D one, is sensible to speed and acceleration.