I recall when this concept was first announced and they had the complete BS assertion that it would be "inherently stable on braking."
First hour of Daytona 24.. locks up brakes and spins out
Yes, no magic, just a backward CG that actually provides some inherent stability when brakingJersey Tom wrote:BS either way, IMO. You spin out trail-braking by running out of rear lateral. The moment generated from lateral forces that far from the CG dwarf whatever "inherent stability" effect you might think you have with braking forces and yaw. I'd guess by immense amounts.
You can get braking stability in any car - DW included - by dialing in front brake bias.. which is commonly known. No magic in DW's layout.
I believe the reason for the removal was a control issue.countersteer wrote:The torque vectoring differential was abandoned on the "original" developed by Bowlby. I don't know if Nissan has pursued it in their version. Have you seen any reference that they have? Thanks...
Eh.. I still don't think rear CG gives you any inherent braking stability, certainly not on a circuit racing carAndres125sx wrote:Yes, no magic, just a backward CG that actually provides some inherent stability when braking
Your statement is like saying F1 cars brakes sucks because you´ve seen some F1 cars going too long on some corners.... Is not possible for you to think DW may have some brake problem?
Like any 911, when the CG is backwards, on braking the mass transfer (I think this is the term, sorry for my english) makes it more neutral. When it´s neutral by design, the CG goes too far forward on braking so the rear end will always loose much more grip.
Yes, any car will suffer that problem (unstability under braking), but if the CG is backwards the problem will be smaller.Jersey Tom wrote:Braking stability though - as in yaw stability under braking (be it straight line or cornering) is going to be all about tire lateral forces. Yes - a car can have some tendency to lose stability on decel because of forward load transfer, but this is regardless of CG location.If you tune the car to be perfectly neutral at constant speed, front CG or rear CG will both lose yaw stability and move toward some amount of oversteer with forward load transfer.
He's not talking about straight line braking capacity. Any car will spin if you overload the rear tires braking capacity while trail braking. The delta wing guys claimed their car would not, which defies physics.Andres125sx wrote:Yes, any car will suffer that problem (unstability under braking), but if the CG is backwards the problem will be smaller.Jersey Tom wrote:Braking stability though - as in yaw stability under braking (be it straight line or cornering) is going to be all about tire lateral forces. Yes - a car can have some tendency to lose stability on decel because of forward load transfer, but this is regardless of CG location.If you tune the car to be perfectly neutral at constant speed, front CG or rear CG will both lose yaw stability and move toward some amount of oversteer with forward load transfer.
My english sucks (sorry if my previous reply didn´t look kind) so I´ll try it with an example. Imagine a car with a rear CG, the mass distribution will be around 40/60 at constant speed, and when braking it may be 60/40 (just a guess). Now another car with a neutral CG, 50/50 distribution, so when braking it will be 70/30. The car with the neutral CG will be more unbalanced under braking, its back side will be lighter (wich is the reason any car is more prone to oversteer under braking), so it will be more prone to oversteer, less stable.
A rear CG means more load on the rear side, and that´s good for braking because the unavoidable unbalance will be smaller. Obviously a car with a rear CG will suffer on other aspects, but for braking I think it´s much better