West wrote:Well the Milliken brothers state in their Race Car Vehicle Dynamics book that that is the proper way to set up steering, which may be against most people's view of Ackermann steering.
Milliken Father and Son......
Bill is the dad, Doug is the son....
I think what's seen on TV is more of a perspective thing. Though anti-ackermann is used in F1, I don't know if Monaco is the track they'll use it. With the speed being slow the load transfer on the car will probably not necessitate the anti-ackerman, and with the super tight corner of the track the excessive inside wheel scrub will probably be undesirable.
To recap, ackermann regularly, is used so that inside turns more than the outside, due to difference in turn radius travelled by the wheels on either side. Anti-ackermann, or reverse-ackermann as said by others, is when you do the opposite. The reason you would use the latter is because on some tire(not necessarily all tires, depends on tire data), the peak lateral force happens at higher slip angle as load increases, and thus to maximize the use of tire, since the outside tire is more heavily loaded at speed, you need to give it more slipangle vs the inside which is at a lower load.