amouzouris, I think you are being a bit too general. A vehicle will change direction (accelerate) in response to external forces, which could be aerodynamic or gravity or some "assistance" from another vehicle. This can occur whether tires are generating force reactions or not; some people have probably experienced the helpless feeling on sliding sideways on a banked icy road with no way to stop it. Your last plot also only describes one mechanism of generating "grip"; as munks mentioned, a cambered tire can develop lateral thrust without a slip angle deflection. Add in tire asymmetries (plysteer, etc) and suddenly the real world isn't as simple as what that plot might indicate.amouzouris wrote:Those graphs show that with 0 degrees of slip angle the coefficient of friction is 0. Furthermore, in order to explain something you isolate it. In this case the depended variable is the Coefficient of Friction and the independent variable is the slip angle.
You're wrong - sorry.amouzouris wrote:Greg..as far as my second sentence is concerned..which i assume you mean "For the vehicle to change direction, regardless of road speed, each of the 4 tires of the vehicle must have some slip angle." it is not wrong..and i can prove it..Greg Locock wrote:Mistake in the second sentence, didn't bother reading the rest.
The fact that you're claiming copyright:amouzouris wrote:Exactly..as i have said before..explanation on camber etc will follow on part3...i am isolating each variable and explaining it...
Dude, c'mon now.amouzouris wrote:Well..you are not mistaken..they are similar to Caroll Smith's illustrations but tehy are not his...because of copyright rules i made my illustrations which are similar
Ok, lets keep it technical. What is your view on my post explaining why your second sentence was incorrect?amouzouris wrote: @urben this conversation is getting out of hand so if you have any problems with my blog or me...please pm me...and lets keep this thrwad technical
Ok. Then on your blog you should give credit that you've taken them from Tune to Win, and aren't directly from your own data, research, or experience.amouzouris wrote:@JT i have not claimed that the graphs are mine
There are differences, yes. You did change a scale from pounds to kilograms. But that's not enough to make it your own. Honestly I'm not trying to make this an attack, this is me trying to help you out. I'll tell you right now, given how many people out there have Tune to Win... putting that stuff in there with no citation or reference and having the authoritative voice that its your information is not going to bode well for your own image or credibility.i already said that they are similar...notice them carefully and you will see yourself that there are differences...