Tim.Wright wrote:Interesting discussion. While the tyre diameter stagger is undoubtedly to act as a differential in the corners, I'm not convinced that applying throttle in a straight line will make the car unconditionally go left.
Consider in this case (straight line, low speed) that you have the left wheel slightly more loaded due to the asymmetric CG and that the inner wheel has a smaller radius, so for a given input torque it will create a higher tractive force at the contact patch compared to the larger diameter outer wheel. These two effects would add together and possibly give the car an initial response yawing to the right before the faster rotational speed of the outside wheel causes the tractive force split to switch sides and give a yaw response into the turn centre.
given, solid axle connecting both wheels (no diff), enough traction for both wheels, I cannot imagine how you could get the car yaw right at any time during a blip on the throttle, torque difference isn't enough, speed difference of the rim of each wheel would matter more, that's my opinion
scenario I can imagine here is that he blips the throttle to point the nose left, induce a little slide, and as a result would move to a slightly smaller radius trajectory, just when the initial directional change is happening (if the blip was so hard as to brake the traction entirely, which probably happened), the back of the car will slightly step out, and a moment later, the whole car has moved to a tighter radius trajectory
I understand your reasoning, but I don't think it applies to a car that is specifically designed to go left
having driven only normal dirt buggies with same diameter tires on each side and solid rear axle, they are pain to turn under no power, inducing a little slide is like the only way, only other comparison I have would be a racing cart on dry slicks on a wet track, you can't turn the thing without braking rear traction at all, especially on a rubbered in racing line