Found this article worth sharing:
http://www.automobilemag.com/features/n ... ewall.html
and producer page:
http://cambertire.com/indexretail.html
My thoughts exactly. And not having a reference on how hard the rubber is pretty much voids any comparison to other tyres.Jersey Tom wrote:So they've gone and built tires with extreme conicity. Meh. I feel like it defeats the purpose of camber - at least in true performance cars. Great though I'm sure for guys who like to put extreme camber in their daily drivers and chew up inside shoulders while making grocery runs.
(The intent of camber on performance cars being IMO to preload the inside shoulder of the tire so that when it rolls out under cornering load, you have a nice big square footprint. By doing this conicity thing I'd think it gets eliminated)
Interesting theory. So is this basically what you think are the mechanics behind the term "camber thrust", or do you consider that as coming from a different effect? So basically, are you saying, is that the extra grip from to camber angle is due to having a larger contact patch, and not necessarily due to extra elastic distortions?Jersey Tom wrote:(The intent of camber on performance cars being IMO to preload the inside shoulder of the tire so that when it rolls out under cornering load, you have a nice big square footprint. By doing this conicity thing I'd think it gets eliminated)
Ditto TJ. Greater thrust comes from greater contact area, all other things being equal. If more thrust is desired just point the wheel a bit more into the turn. The general rule is to add usually negative camber until the tire shows an equal temperature profile across the tread.Tim.Wright wrote:What you typically read in literature is that the camber thrust effect is due an extra lateral distorsion in the contact patch which comes from the tread elements having to change trajectory w.r.t the wheel centre as they enter the contact patch. Not a great explanation, but I'm sure you know what I'm talking about since its written in a lot of books.
My sentiments exactly!Tim.Wright wrote:I think the main point of them is to allow you to continue around with your camber at -5deg, looking like a penis, but without the extra tyre wear. Quite a noble cause.