Jersey Tom wrote:Some feedback...
1. Visually it's quite nice. A lot of engineers are honestly poor at presenting things looking clean, sharp, and aesthetic - and don't think it's important. I think it's crucial.
2. The article starts with title, "WHAT THE BOOKS DIDN’T TELL YOU ABOUT LATERAL WEIGHT TRANSFER AND HOW TO USE IT IN SETUP", yet it kinda comes across as a regurgitation of book material (including reference graphs from RCVD). A lot of people cover this topic in the same way - to make it interesting I think what gets people's attention is what your take on it is. How does your experience and practical examples align with the theory?
3. In general I think it's good practice to put an executive summary first rather than last - especially when writing technical reports. I like to start off with the high level takeaways, the "Here's what you absolutely must see if you only spend 30 seconds on this page." Have something to catch the reader's interest, then let the more verbose bit following that be the supporting evidence. As it currently reads it's easy to lose the reader's focus or attention span - and that's coming from someone who does this for a living, much less a casual enthusiast.
Thanks for such a good feedback, mate!
Regarding your comments:
1. Thanks for the compliments to the design. I agree with you, aesthetics is quite important to build trust in the content you present.
2. A few people told me about that. I thing the problem is most of the things that are presented in the beginning of the article are the stuff that can be found in books. I did include a mix of personal experience, with some analysis I did for a generic open wheeler. Also I included my own interpretation of analyses I did with matlab, and that can be found under section "Lateral Load Transfer as a Setup Tool".
3. It's definitely an idea to consider. My posts are generally long, and keeping the reader's attention span is a challenge. Having the takeaways in the beginning of the post rather than at the end, seems like a reasonable solution for that.
Thanks again for your help!