Carlos wrote:We could " expand " the contact patch of a spherical tire by filling it with a light liquid polymer foam that would respond in density to an electrostatic charge... Sorry--- I did not intend to detract attention from the technical depth of the conversation--up too early and just too many cups of strong coffee--and too much time on my hands. Thank you all for your indulgence.
Actually, Carlos,
an F1 tire works exactly that way: the lowest density material "melts" away and adhere to the surface. This happens in response to temperature, not to electrostatic charge, so this is what you try to control.

If you don't believe this (I know I wouldn't!

), this is
the theory and here is
an explanation. Please, read the explanation: you'll be amazed.
I like to think that the work of Mr. Persson is behind the success of Bridgestone tyres and helped somehow Ferrari since 2001, when he published, but it could be wishful thinking. Anyway, I like to post his photo, because he solved the old mistery of why a tire grips the road and the mistery behind the friction "coefficient" so here it goes again (sorry...):
An F1 tire is not degraded as long-distance tires are: it is "sucked dry". Keep the colombian coffee up!
As for joseff, I am sorry, master, but I still don't see the light. I am still confused, looking at the diagram I made. As you displace the wheel to the left, as I tried to draw on the right of the image, you are exerting a greater force on the right side of the car.
This component of lateral and vertical force, that I also tried to draw with the three arrows in the image, is what "falls" on the center of the contact patch and precisely, what makes the car move laterally. The wheel can spin around an axis perpendicular to this force without problems, at least in the Jhon Hopkins design I shown.
In my confused state of mind, I try to make this comparison: imagine a car with four wheels you can change the camber only (without changing the direction of the wheel as they point straight ahead only). Would this car turn? And... what is the sound of one hand clapping?
