fiohaa wrote:Ogami musashi wrote:
However the required lateral grip needed does increase linearly with weight hence more weight always means (except if you have grippier tyres...which is not the case for P1) less cornering speed.
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this is exactly right. Obviously if the vehicle weighs more, the tyre has to work harder to maintain the same level of lateral loads.
i think beelsebob is very confused.
Nope, you're just confused about what I'm asserting – I didn't assert that a truck could corner faster, only that it had more grip... But also required more grip in order to turn, and hence would corner slower.
although to be fair it is easy to get the concept of weight and downforce mixed up. actually im struggling now...i mean the extra 'weight' induced by downforce in an f1 car is slightly different to the standing weight of a truck...because its being physically pushed down by air.
Nope, no mix up here – weight *is* downforce. Downforce is simply force on the car, downwards. This includes both weight and negative lift created by aero surfaces.
This is not the same as a trucks weight bearing down on the tyres, theres nothing pushing the truck to the ground through the tyre.
Uh no, you're very confused here - force is force, there's no magical "aerodynamic" force that pushes down somehow magically more than gravity pushes down... Both weight and negative lift push an F1 car into the track. Only weight pushes a truck into the track.
Its just a heavy truck....sat on some tyres. It would therefore have a huge amount of inertia going into a corner, and therefore a truck would NOT be able to corner at the same speed as an F1 car, even if it had max grippy tyres.
No it wouldn't... But it would have more grip.