Jersey Tom wrote:Andres125sx wrote:But the DW mass distribution is so far back even on braking the rear is not lighter than the front wheels, so even when braking there´s more or less the same grip at both ends, so the tendency of the car is not to oversteer when braking anymore.
Not quite correct.
It's not just the mass and dynamic load distribution that makes a car's handling balance what it is. It's that in relation to the springs, bars, aero, etc.
Yes, but that´s the same as with the brake bias, those are final adjustments, but the chassis is the base of the car, what will make it behave one way or another. Then the rest of the parts you put on it can help solving some problems or improve something, but the part wich mainly dictates how the car behaves is the chassis.
You can use the parts you want on a DW, but it will never behave like a 458 because the chassis are night and day. So a rule of thumb for a standard design like a 458, may be not applicable for the DW.
Jersey Tom wrote: And - for what it's worth - all things being equal moving CG (as in true mass, not dynamic load transfer) rearward will tend to make for more oversteer. That's Handling 101.
I´m not sure if I get this correcly or it´s my poor english, but if you mean the further back you move the CG (with no mass change) the more oversteer you will suffer, sorry but I only can disagree
As a motocross driver I can tell you when you need grip for a wheel, you move your weight to that axis, that´s basic driving technic and it´s valid for any vehicle. Move your body backwards when braking to avoid the rear wheel jumping but also to add grip (you also do it on slipery terrains when there´s no risk for the rear wheel to jump), take the corner balanced to have good grip on both wheels, and then move backwards again to hit the throttle and improve the traction, or if you´ve slided more than expected you have to move backwards as much as you can.
For a given mass, more weight on a wheel (or moving the CG) means more grip.
The DW is like a MX driver who is always tilted backwards, he will strugle when cornering but on braking he´ll be the fastest because is placed at the perfect position for braking, while a standard chassis design is like an MX driver who is always centered, he will be the fastest cornering but will lack tons of rear grip when braking or accelerating, but since most cars are designed this way we consider that as the standard and don´t think standard cars lack rear grip, but DW should be way better in this aspect. And should strugle when cornering at constant speed, but that´s another debate, here we were discussing the statement about the inherent stability when braking
Another example are 911´s. DW is an extreme 911, everything is loable on a 911 (traction, braking perfomance) will be even better on a DW, and any weak point of a 911 (understeer at constant speed) will be even worse on the DW..... but they maybe solved this with a really light design (something Porsche can´t say), only 475kg, but again, that´s a different discussion
Jersey Tom wrote:Anyway. For any given mass distribution you're going to set the rest of the car up (mechanical + aero) to make for a neutral cornering balance - or whatever amount of understeer you desire. Let's say your driver likes 0.1 deg/G understeer. Regardless of what the car is (DeltaWing or not) you'll adjust the setup to get to that point of nearly neutral handling. That means that when you go to trailbrake, you'll still move toward oversteer regardless!
I agree that´s the usual aproachment, but not for the DW. They´ve decided to go a different route. With 72% of the mass on the rear wheels you can´t expect neutral handling at constant speed, so obviously that´s not what they had in mind when in the drawing board.
My speculation is they´ve accepted the car will understeer at constant speed, but they live with it because they´re so light even with that tendency to understeer their min cornering speed must be quite good, so the weak point of that design is not so weak if they´re so light. If they don´t have any huge weak point because of this, and for braking and accelerating their design is the best (on most situations), then I can understand DW engineers and even applaud them =D>
Jersey Tom wrote:The only things that are going to affect how much balance moves with forward load transfer on brakes are (a) brake bias, (b) cg height and wheelbase, (c) tire properties. Doesn't matter whether your starting mass distribution is 55/45, 50/50, or 35/65.
Again disagree, your starting mass distribution is a KEY factor that change it all, weight distribution does change the grip, and therefore the behaviour