strad wrote:bill shoe wrote:
Strad, what cars/tires or theory leads you to say #1?
Quite simple..The effect of camber could be seen in the extreme on the Red Bulls.
Where they blistered was where most of the contact/weight bearing was..That narrow band presents a lot less resistance than when the tire is standing upright and making full contact across the face of the tire.
Toe in or toe out would just increase the rolling resistance.
I don't buy this as a good argument. It is true that the narrow band was carrying more weight in a straight line, but think about what is happening overall.
As a first approximation the contact patch stays the same size regardless of camber (if air pressure and vertical load are constant). Therefore the supported car weight per unit of contact patch area stays the same. The weight and pressure issues don't change.
The tire has some internal damping. This damping combined with the tire deformation is where rolling resistance comes from. The most severe rolling deformation occurs in two places-- the leading and trailing edges of the contact patch. Look there to determine overall rolling resistance.
If you put more air in the tire then the contact patch becomes smaller, but this in itself does not decrease rolling resistance. The resistance decreases because smaller (shorter) contact patches result in less deformation (less angle change) in the leading and trailing edges of the contact patch. The tire comes closer to maintaining a perfect circle through these transitions.
Negative camber makes the contact patch longer on the inside shoulder (more deformation) and shorter on the outside shoulder (less deformation). Which wins? Is the overall resistance higher or lower?
It gets complicated here and you would probably have to include temp effects. However, my intuition is that negative camber surely does not reduce rolling resistance in a straight line. If it did then highly efficient vehicles such as the Toyota Prius would use a lot of negative camber.