kurtis714
Automotive
- Jun 8, 2005
- 4
Morning,
I read recently that the coeff. of friction of a tyre to road interface will decrease with increasing mass of the vehicle. If it didn't then any vehicle of any mass running similar tyres would, with all else equal, be able to hold an equal corner speed. Common sense says not to me, my question is why? What assumedly microscopic action takes place at the interface to reduce the value of mu? Or is it macroscopic and am I missing something obvious? Bear in mind i'm not talking about straight line accel or braking distance, just steady state cornering. Disregard any aerodynamic effects too.
thanks,
Kurtis.
I read recently that the coeff. of friction of a tyre to road interface will decrease with increasing mass of the vehicle. If it didn't then any vehicle of any mass running similar tyres would, with all else equal, be able to hold an equal corner speed. Common sense says not to me, my question is why? What assumedly microscopic action takes place at the interface to reduce the value of mu? Or is it macroscopic and am I missing something obvious? Bear in mind i'm not talking about straight line accel or braking distance, just steady state cornering. Disregard any aerodynamic effects too.
thanks,
Kurtis.