Reference about MotoGP rear wheel jumping under braking?J.A.W. wrote: ↑22 May 2018, 10:58Got references for those assertions, Andres?Andres125sx wrote: ↑22 May 2018, 09:17Funny or not, bikes are far from F1 cars, their rear wheel can literally jump while braking if they take a bump because maybe 90-95% of the weight is at the front wheel while braking, so DF at the front does not help, if it would be at the rear it would be a completely different matter, but that´s not the caseNonserviam85 wrote: ↑22 May 2018, 01:05So downforce doesn't help at braking? Funny to hear that at a F1 technical forum...
I´ve read that´s one of the problems of Pedrosa in MotoGP, he´s too light and can´t load the rear end at the brakings so he literally can´t brake as hard as heavier riders, his read wheel loose contact sooner
F1 cars don´t have any problem of a jumpy rear end, it becomes lighter too but not to the point the wheels can loose contact with tarmac as we see on MotoGP (in F1 brake balance is around 55-45% or 60-40% as much, front-rear, wich is an evidence the rear end is more planted), and the DF is more balanced so it also aids keeping the rear planted
Or about F1 brake bias?
I´m amazed you´re asking for references about these obvious assertions, but if you need it here they are:
Or even better, look at this video, how many turns of the rear wheel while in the air?
About brake bias, at this track Hamilton toggle during the lap from 58.5 to 60 (front percentage)
(I´ve skiped your usual offensive comments)J.A.W. wrote: ↑22 May 2018, 10:58As stated, very little rear brake is used, ('cept to help with cornering, as previously - & correctly, noted),
& indeed, several expensive ( slipper clutch/electronic over-ride) 'fixes' - were needed to reduce unwanted
'engine braking' effects from the high inertia big 4T engines, too.. as it happens..
Obviously, just as in F1, added downforce via aero-means - allows for harder braking to be transmitted to the
front tyre contact patch.. but.. sans anti-lock systems - it is fully incumbent on each rider to carefully modulate
the pressure applied, as the aero-downforce drops - with the speed..
Sorry but you´re confusing different things. They barely use any rear brake because the rear wheel is almost on the air, if not completely as shown above, so any rear brake input will only lock the wheel, stall the bike, and cause a crash. That´s the reason they had to reduce unwanted engine braking effects, any engine retention can cause a lock and the engine stalling. Not good.
Ducati´s longer wheelbase OTOH reduce this problem (so Ducati riders might use the rear brake more than their rivals), but magnifies a different one, steering while entering the corner, as longer wheelbase is more stable, but less agile, so they need to use the rear brake to cause some oversteering, or reduce understeering.
But DF while braking, if located at the front end, is useless. No bike need anti-lock systems on dry conditions (on tarmac!), as the limiting factor is not the front wheel grip, but the rear wheel becoming too light, jumping, and moving sideways causing serious stability problems to the rider
This is far from the most scary braking I´ve seen, but it´s the best I found on a quick search, I hope you get the idea (sorry you need to click for watching on youtube)
So DF at the front end, for braking, is useless. They´d need DF at the rear end to keep the rear wheel planted so they can hit the front brake harder and improve braking, but nowadays, unlike F1, front wheel grip while braking is not the problem, it´s the rear wheel becoming too light