I didn't know that........and don't understand itISLAMATRON wrote:rear wheels closer tgether aids in traction, for example dragster rear tires are very close. Having the front track width wider than the rears also helps with being able to change direction more quickly.
Track width is not the only thing that influences a cars handling and charicteristics, most of the time engineers dail in a little downforce at the front wing to reduce understeer, and the opposite for oversteer. Charicteristics are inherited to many design parameters, for example, recently the McLarens have tended to be very 'oversteery' where as the Renaults have tended to be quite 'understeery'.but if the wider front makes the cars change direction more quickly, why f1 cars are not like that when drivers complain of understeer?
Basically this is a three-wheeler, (for all intents and purposes).... the problem here is that the front wheels will have to absorb all the load transfer... that means the outside front tyre will be much more heavily loaded (twice as much load transfer to the outside front tyre than an equivalent car with equal front and rear track).... and that will promote understeer.... The advantage of a three wheeler is you can make it really light, so road going three wheelers have good cornering capability compared to four wheelers, despite the problem of load transfer.... the problem is most racing rules don't allow the car to take advantage of this by specifying a having minimum weight (as in F1)....Conceptual wrote:So, if I was designing a car that used bicycle tyres, could I have the rear tyres mounted on a skateboard truck (6 inches apart) and the front tyres 24 inches apart?
What do you guys think?
Oh? Prove itmarcush. wrote:...As one mil definitively makes a difference...