Sure, slip angle would be the more proper term in this case.Caito wrote:Shouldn't you care more about slip angle rather than steer angle?Jersey Tom wrote:Corner entry is transient, but often not that transient. I'd say springs, bars, and nose weight are going to have as much or more an affect than dampers.
I still like my explanation the bestTemperature, transients, and all other fanciness aside... what the tire is doing at small steer angles vs large are just two totally different animals.
In a really, really fast corner you could need little steering input to generate maximum slip angle, whereas in a slow corner you need to turn the steering a lot to reach the maximum slip angle.
Of course steer angle also affects diagonal weight transfer, that's why I ask you.
Point being, I think it's wise to look for simple answers rather than going down the road of elaborate handwaving and speculation of temperature build-up and all this.
With a super simple 4-parameter formulation of the Pac tire model you can quite easily come up an example front and rear tire set that's neutral or even oversteer on turn-in and then huge understeer mid corner.