Jersey Tom wrote:g-force_addict wrote:I've read radial tires won't benefit much from negative camber unlike bias ply tires.
What gives?
Not sure where you've heard these things.
Bias-ply tires have been found to generate more camber thrust than radial tires
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camber_thrust
Jersey Tom wrote:There's a reason why F1 teams run 3-4 degrees camber and NASCAR runs as much as double that. Both on "radial" tires.
You said it right.
"Radial" tires
Racing tires aren't really radial tires.
They are "slightly bias ply" tires as their reinforcing belts aren't exactly perpendicular like true radial tires. They are actually angled thus they are really bias ply tires.
you_nes wrote:So I'm new here (long time reader, first time writer) so please forgive me for jumping into your conversation unannounced...
BUT This topic is mixing a few things all together and I thought I would try and clarify.
Firstly, camber gain and static camber are not the same thing.
- Static camber is the angular misalignment of the tires centre line from a vertical plane when stationary. (unit = deg)
- Camber gain is the change in camber with changing geometry. (unit = deg/mm, deg/deg or deg/g depending on use)
I think we are talking mostly about static camber here as (at least to my eyeballs) f1 cars do not have much built in camber gain.
and second, camber gain is the change in camber with ANY change in geometry. For most front suspension designs (including F1) this means that there are 2 separate mechanisms for camber gain.
- Steering (castor + scrub effect) go-cart steering is a good example of this.
and
- Suspension displacement (wishbone geometry effect.)
As I said before f1 cars do not seem to have much camber gain from either mechanism. On the other hand, I remember seeing some old photos of a NASCAR lower wishbone which was very short, if this is still the case it's likely that they have HUGE camber gain from suspension displacement which is probably why they have such large static camber to compensate (so the tire ends up with some, much smaller, positive camber at race speed when the front lip has sucked the car down to the road.)
And for what its worth I did some research a few years back into tyre "camber tolerance" and raymondu999 is right on the money when he says that heat is the limiting factor in choosing appropriate camber settings. too much on a stiff tire and you overheat the inside edge, too little on a soft one and you cook the outside. The whole radial/bias ply comparison is pretty useless these days though because the tire companies are pretty good at blurring the line between the 2 and most Motorsport tires end up not really being either one or the other. (they angle, or bias, the radial plies so I suppose you could call them biased radials or radial biased?)
so yeah, keep adding camber until you blister the inside edge of your tire and then back it off a bit! (pretty much what redbull and co learned at spa last year!)
That's right.
Negative static camber helps keep the tire RELATIVELY vertical during body roll.
And yes during body roll F1s run very little or even no net negative camber, specially for the inner wheel.