Though the subject of Ackerman is rather involved, it may be useful to develop one aspect of a theory of Ackerman. With a fairly complete but limited rationale, perhaps this will develop an informed discussion.
Tires
Tire performance is often reported in a first classical three-axis format with, slip angle, cornering thrust and load plotted. I’m assuming that cornering thrust is measured parallel to the wheel axel. Also, though not universal, an important common tire characteristic is the ability of a more lightly loaded tire to maintain a flatter, near maximum cornering thrust over a larger slip angle range than a more heavily loaded tire..
Not often seen is a second similar graph with drag replacing cornering thrust. In this plot, the more heavily loaded tire develops greater drag that also increases with greater slip angle. To be clear, this second plot has not, to my knowledge, been published by tire companies and is inferred from observations.
Pointing Couple
To turn, a car must first point in a new direction. Of course, the car wants to travel in its established direction and exerts a centrifugal force attempting to maintain the original direction when forced to turn (accelerate) from an established direction. The turning centripetal force is developed by pointing the front tires to obtain the desired new direction thus developing the needed front tire slip angles and the thrust as referenced in the above-mentioned first plot.
Two phenomenons are involved with entering (turn in) and maintaining cornering. First, the car must overcome its own inertia to rotate around its own polar axis to point in the desired direction; and then it must generate a cornering thrust towards its instantaneous turn center. Thus, on turn in, a turning or pointing couple is developed to redirect the car in order to develop the required slip angles that, in turn, generate the tire thrust through the instantaneous turn center. However, the turn itself transfers weight from the inner to the outside tires. As stated in regard to the second graph, the outer tires develop greater drag than the inner tires. This unbalance results in a pointing couple tending to redirect the car out of the desired turn. Thus the car wants to away from the desired turn as a result of asymmetrical lesser inner and greater outer tire drag.
Ackerman
The undesirable pointing couple can be offset by generating offsetting tire drag at the inner steering tire by either pro or antiAckerman. The turning thrust of the lightly loaded inner tire is not materially diminished in view of the flat nature of such thrust over fairly broad slip angles.
There are a number of other important considerations involved in Ackerman, but the discussion gets involved. So this thread is (hopefully) specific to the pointing couple