henry wrote: ↑23 Feb 2019, 15:42
JondoIramat wrote: ↑23 Feb 2019, 14:31
henry wrote: ↑23 Feb 2019, 12:29
The first part of this
“The Ferrari more softly sprung to encourage weight transfer”
Is wrong on two counts.
Firstly the “transfer” of tyre load from front to rear is not dependant on the suspension stiffness. They could run no suspension at all and the exact same change would happen. What the stiffness does is affect the amount of movement and how quickly that movement happens. The first is down to the springs and the second the damping elements. So a car with soft suspension moves more in response to the exact same forces experienced by a more stiffly sprung car.
Secondly it’s not “weight” that gets transferred it’s load. Load is the sum of the downward forces acting on the axles. The weight of a car is one of those forces. It is the mass of the car being accelerated downwards by gravity.
...
Did you take into account the wheel radius and possible uphill or downhill movement while braking?
In the simple case of load transfer under braking I don’t think wheel radius or slope has a part to play. The forces involved are either parallel to the road surface or perpendicular to it.
Am I wrong?
You are right and you did a very clear analysis. Wheel radius doesn't matter, plus it is something you cannot modify. Slope would change things a little, but it really doesn't matter in designing a car...
On the weight vs load part you are right in the difference, but while breaking it only the weight to be transfer, so we can use either word.