Why would that be the case?Andres125sx wrote: If the corner is not a fast one, because the weight then will play his role
Why would that be the case?Andres125sx wrote: If the corner is not a fast one, because the weight then will play his role
Basic physics dictate that a car corners faster than a car.mzivtins wrote:With everyone expressing the differences between the cornering abilities of a motorbike VS a car, if you are passing bikes in a corner, and they are not dragging their knees, then the comparison cannot be made. It is the same as arguing you are faster than a car in a straight line when the opposing car is at 50% throttle.
Lean angle is critical to a motorbikes cornering abilities. When you see bikes on the ring, the only thing stopping them from being faster than most normal road cars, is the rider and his (quite correct) sense of mortality.
Remember, anytime you feel the front push a little wide, or the rear snap out, on a bike that is a one way ticket to broken bones and ego.
cars corner faster than motorbikes? the only answer it, it depends on the corner
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ncgT008MxI
To add to the thread: Bikes all have sequential gearboxes, i wish cars did! clutch-less gearshifts on a bike are faster than most accessible flappy-paddle gearboxes out there.
Can´t provide a technical explanation, probably someone around here can explain it, but I´d venture to say probably aero has a part of responsability, as it affect cars without downforce decreasing grip as speed is increased due to their´s aero propertiesErunanethiel wrote:Why would that be the case?Andres125sx wrote: If the corner is not a fast one, because the weight then will play his role
True enough. But I wouldn't lean on this argument too hard, mind you, as the ability of a car to extract a higher percentage of its potential in most circumstances is precisely its advantage. In other words; that a car can pretty much deal with load shifts in a safe manner, be on the brakes at maximum stopping power within the split of a second, regain grip in corners that you misjudged or deal better with bumpy roads altogether is its advantage. Also that potential accidents aren't necessarily mortal. We shouldn't be interested in comparing these very different vehicles in a vacuum because life and typical road surfaces aren't that.mzivtins wrote:Lean angle is critical to a motorbikes cornering abilities. When you see bikes on the ring, the only thing stopping them from being faster than most normal road cars, is the rider and his (quite correct) sense of mortality.
I always used to think that bolting a set of really wide tyres on would give me a much bigger contact patch and hence more grip.Phil wrote:[
And the rather most simple and non-refuted argument in the whole argument between bikes and cars in a corner speed comparison is that the car can pretty easily and simply increase its grip by using wider tires to enlarge its contact patch where as on the bike you can not and are limited by the grip coefficient and the lean angle (that has a theoretical max). It's not to say that you can take any car and just slap wider tires on it mind you, but on a 4 wheeled vehicle, you have options (extending contact patch, lowering weight, lower CoG, adding downforce).
I think that solves it for me Phil! You're correct... my previous statement around "well it depends what corner", is kind of like me saying "Hey, i beat you 1 time out of 100! Therefore we are equal footed"Phil wrote:True enough. But I wouldn't lean on this argument too hard, mind you, as the ability of a car to extract a higher percentage of its potential in most circumstances is precisely its advantage. In other words; that a car can pretty much deal with load shifts in a safe manner, be on the brakes at maximum stopping power within the split of a second, regain grip in corners that you misjudged or deal better with bumpy roads altogether is its advantage. Also that potential accidents aren't necessarily mortal. We shouldn't be interested in comparing these very different vehicles in a vacuum because life and typical road surfaces aren't that.mzivtins wrote:Lean angle is critical to a motorbikes cornering abilities. When you see bikes on the ring, the only thing stopping them from being faster than most normal road cars, is the rider and his (quite correct) sense of mortality.
And the rather most simple and non-refuted argument in the whole argument between bikes and cars in a corner speed comparison is that the car can pretty easily and simply increase its grip by using wider tires to enlarge its contact patch where as on the bike you can not and are limited by the grip coefficient and the lean angle (that has a theoretical max). It's not to say that you can take any car and just slap wider tires on it mind you, but on a 4 wheeled vehicle, you have options (extending contact patch, lowering weight, lower CoG, adding downforce).
True though; how well a bike fairs in a corner depends also on the corner and the 4-wheeled vehicle in question. Optimal case; Car with downforce, large grip levels and high performance (like a F1 car representing the most extreme you can get) and there too, 4 wheels beats two.
I wasn't assuming equal tire pressures, but pressures optimally suited to the tire and weight of the vehicle. It's a good point though, none-the-less. I was also assuming adequate rims suited to the task, not slapping (too) wide tires onto narrow rims. That's a given. Theoretical, there's also a limit on cars on how much cornering load you can achieve because the engine might run dry without taking measures (talking about more affordable cars here). I didn't want to drag the discussion into comparing a specific vehicle with a given set of boundaries, but wanted to keep it neutral, which is why I just wanted to make the point that on a car, generally, you can do things to improve grip & cornering (or design your car to fair better in those specific areas) whereas a bike will always be rather limited by the physical boundaries and more importantly the ability of the rider willing to get close to that limit on suboptimal track conditions.emaren wrote:Except that it doesn't. In reality it changes the shape of the contact area.
Exactly, with the correct tyre pressure. If you double tire width and keep same tyre pressure, you´re not using the correct tyre pressure, so that explanation is not very accurateemaren wrote:I always used to think that bolting a set of really wide tyres on would give me a much bigger contact patch and hence more grip.Phil wrote:[
And the rather most simple and non-refuted argument in the whole argument between bikes and cars in a corner speed comparison is that the car can pretty easily and simply increase its grip by using wider tires to enlarge its contact patch where as on the bike you can not and are limited by the grip coefficient and the lean angle (that has a theoretical max). It's not to say that you can take any car and just slap wider tires on it mind you, but on a 4 wheeled vehicle, you have options (extending contact patch, lowering weight, lower CoG, adding downforce).
Except that it doesn't. In reality it changes the shape of the contact area.
http://www.performancesimulations.com/w ... -pressure/
It gets confusing, but the contact area is mostly to do with the weight and (correct) tyre pressure.
Tim.Wright wrote:The tyre produces grip from 2 mechanisms:
1. Coulomb friction - this is independent of contact patch area
2. Adhesive forces - these are proportional to contact patch area
So if you increase the tyre size, you increase the adhesive component of the total grip.
I've seen the same tenancy on the Nordscleife too. The bikes get in everyone's way in the corners, and then disappear on the straights.
Yup - most of that is related to the cost of commitment.Andres125sx wrote:
I've seen the same tenancy on the Nordscleife too. The bikes get in everyone's way in the corners, and then disappear on the straights.
Andres125sx wrote:A car is faster around a corner....
If the corner is long enough so both lines have similar radius, because a bike is thinner so if it´s an angle type corner the real line will have a wider radius than the line the car will do
If the corner is not a fast one, because the weight then will play his role
If it´s a single corner, because a chicane (again, if corners are short) can be taken on a more straight line with a bike
So you can compare bike vs cars on a specific corner, but generally speaking there are many parameters wich will make a generic discussion endless
What is not debatable:
A bike is much much faster on straights
A car is much faster on brakings
But even so it may be debatable because.... what bike compared with what car?
And that´s without mentioning what´s the reason to ban cars with downforce, because that´s one of the advantages of cars over bikes, so if you want to compare MotoGP bikes vs production cars I don´t think that´s a fair comparison, but comparing production cars vs production bikes I think those are the main differences
Not at all.. there are many different performance parameters at play - that is what makes it interesting..nmoleiro wrote:Aren't you tired of comparing vehicles with such a different power/weight ratio?... I am a little bit...