Hi Tim,
Thanks for the response.
Tim.Wright wrote:
I understood the question. The car's are designed to negotiate the tightest corners on the calender and nothing more. As it is they already run special steering an suspension geometry at monaco to get around the lowes hairpin so you can take that as an absolute minimum.
That hairpin has an outside radius of ~14 m, meaning a rough steering angle of almost 19 deg.
(Simple sine law, and assuming roughly 4.5 m between front and rear wheels.)
(The inside radius is ~6 m, which I can negotiate with my old Lancer, but an F1 could never.)
Tim.Wright wrote:
Even if you had the precise steering angles of a car you can't calculate anything more precise than a rough estimate of its turn radius because the radius that the car can turn depends on many things over just the steer angle of the wheels. Things like tyre cornering stiffness, CG location, load transfer distribution, suspension kinematics & compliance and ackermann geometry will all have an effect on the cornering radius but are not taken into account using the kinematic model you described.
Yes, I'm well aware of that. A full model of the turn radius will be an intricate differential equation,
that requires an extensive computer program with many variables, to calculate.
Many factors will increase the radius, and rear wheel drift would decrease it,
but F1 is hardly drift racing
However, I am not modeling the turn radius of the cars for analytical purpose;
I am starting to draft a proposition to FIA regarding future track approval rules.
F.ex, several of the start incidents during 2016 can be blamed on over-tight first corners,
(in addition to occasional clumsy driving), and my proposition will include a demand that
corners should, in general, be negotiable without blocking the entire (or most of) the track.
In other words, track corners should, in general, have an inner radius no less than the
minimum turn radius of the cars. That would f.ex. mean the hairpin at Spa would need
to be rounded off (close to the current pit exit curve).
(The proposition will also address the minimum acceptable track width,
which would mean rejection of both Monaco and Suzuka in their present forms.)
Tim.Wright wrote:
More steering lock generally means strutural compromises in the suspension and a generally bigger and heavier steering system so you can reasonably assume the minimum radius the cars can handle is the minimum one on todays calender which is probably at monaco.
Yes, I understand that..
I was just wondering if any of you guys actually had the hard data from some cars rather than
estimates that we may calculate by observing de facto trajectories.
Best Regards
// Neo