Ciro Pabón wrote:Jersey Tom wrote:Sounds like BS, to be honest.. and that guy is mixing up terminology. Not exactly a reputable source (not that there really are any).
Yes, agreed. I swear it works, but the reason? Don't know. What I know is that everybody
and his dog rides with rear axle as high as possible (it has only two positions, btw) and raises the front axle in the rain (this can be graduated, unlike the rear). I do and I really like driving in the rain. I think I have an advantage because of my height. You lose a little bit of braking, but, also in the rain, you want to
stomp on the brakes, another thing in karts that goes against the full-racing-car theory, btw.
Jersey Tom wrote:For example, suppose you had a car that was SUPER wide. As wide as the race track! In theory you'd have real great grip on a skidpad. However, the width of the thing would mean your racing line would be stuck going around the center of the track. With a narrow track width, you can take a much broader arc through the corner.
OMG. I'm getting dumber by the minute. I swear I thought you both were talking about the
racetrack width... damn english.
fatburner wrote:How would you define "grip"?Is it the friction factor*weight?Or just the situation,when car has a feel of more grip?Or sth. else?
Grip, I think, is the amount of lateral force a tyre can develop before sliding.
I know I am Beating and old dog ( old forum topic) with a stick here, but in karting, if your rear axle sits at its highest point (As you suggest here), it actually means the chassis is at the lowest it can be.
Same with the front. Raising the front stubs, means you are putting the spaces between and underneath the stub and C joint, lowering the front of the kart.
I wouldn't really do that to the front especially in the wet because it means you have less leverage to turn the inside front "underneath" the kart to create the jacking effect at the rear.
Another point about lower rear ride height. It also means you are moving the CoG a bit rearwards, placing more weight on the rear of the kart percentage wise. This, to me (logically) means that you now have a bigger percentage of weight at the rear (At your disposal) and will therefore be able to transfer more weight to the outside rear whilst cornering, creating even more side bite on the outside rear tire (if you use your body weight correctly during cornering to lift the inside rear).
just my 2 cents