VBird
Automotive
- Dec 23, 2002
- 7
Hi!
Could someone here tell me if I have to eat humble pie or not?
I have become embroiled in a fairly heated 'debate' about 'grip and slip'.
My view is simply that a tyre has a certain level of 'grip' by which I mean it has a quota of Adherence and Conformity that ensures you have traction, after a certain load on the tyre it can no longer gain this 'grip' in either the short time it is in contact with the road or the load has meant there is no further conformity available.
So a graph with even rates on each axis [x-y] would show [as most tyres have a 'static friction' of more than 1.4/1] a line at 55degrees [approx] then as we reached the point where the tyre could be said to be slipping at a real discernible rate the graph line would fall away in the manner of a parabola or missile trajectory plot.
The other side to this states catagorically that this does not happen, and that the fall off is immediate from 0 or 1kg
Now this wouldn't be so bad and I would normally dismiss any counter arguement as just the ramblings of a novice... HOWEVER... the guy who is turning upside-down all my old thinking says he sorta knows Doug Milliken, is part of the FIA World Rally set-up, is a test driver and all sorts of things... he's a big cheese!
So simply, do I have to eat humble pie?
Have I completely mis-understood all I was taught?
Am I woefully out of date and all I learnt years ago has been overturned in the last year?
Could someone here tell me if I have to eat humble pie or not?
I have become embroiled in a fairly heated 'debate' about 'grip and slip'.
My view is simply that a tyre has a certain level of 'grip' by which I mean it has a quota of Adherence and Conformity that ensures you have traction, after a certain load on the tyre it can no longer gain this 'grip' in either the short time it is in contact with the road or the load has meant there is no further conformity available.
So a graph with even rates on each axis [x-y] would show [as most tyres have a 'static friction' of more than 1.4/1] a line at 55degrees [approx] then as we reached the point where the tyre could be said to be slipping at a real discernible rate the graph line would fall away in the manner of a parabola or missile trajectory plot.
The other side to this states catagorically that this does not happen, and that the fall off is immediate from 0 or 1kg
Now this wouldn't be so bad and I would normally dismiss any counter arguement as just the ramblings of a novice... HOWEVER... the guy who is turning upside-down all my old thinking says he sorta knows Doug Milliken, is part of the FIA World Rally set-up, is a test driver and all sorts of things... he's a big cheese!
So simply, do I have to eat humble pie?
Have I completely mis-understood all I was taught?
Am I woefully out of date and all I learnt years ago has been overturned in the last year?