mark512
Mechanical
- Aug 4, 2017
- 34
I'm looking at the concept of "center-point steering" which seems to mean that there is zero mechanical trail and zero scrub radius (steering axis passes through the geometric center of the tire contact patch) or by some definitions, just zero scrub radius (steering axis passes through the geometric center of the tire contact patch in the front/rear view only.)
Practically, does this mean that the scrub radius (and mechanical trail) are *literally* zero, or just "relatively small"?
...In particular regarding scrub radius, the designers of the 1st-gen Mazda MX-5/Miata talk a lot about designing zero scrub radius into the car, and how the effects of having a scrub radius are bad, how zero scrub is good for the feel of the car, and how that was high priority when designing the front suspension.
Other sources say that zero scrub radius is bad, and results in "squirm" - the effective scrub radius goes positive and negative as a result of pneumatic scrub (and/or the loaded radius of the tire changing in combination with having steering axis inclination). The consensus here is that the scrub radius should be slightly positive or slightly negative but not zero, so that the aforementioned factors don't cause the effective scrub radius to change signs. Right now, this latter concept makes sense to me...
Practically, does this mean that the scrub radius (and mechanical trail) are *literally* zero, or just "relatively small"?
...In particular regarding scrub radius, the designers of the 1st-gen Mazda MX-5/Miata talk a lot about designing zero scrub radius into the car, and how the effects of having a scrub radius are bad, how zero scrub is good for the feel of the car, and how that was high priority when designing the front suspension.
Other sources say that zero scrub radius is bad, and results in "squirm" - the effective scrub radius goes positive and negative as a result of pneumatic scrub (and/or the loaded radius of the tire changing in combination with having steering axis inclination). The consensus here is that the scrub radius should be slightly positive or slightly negative but not zero, so that the aforementioned factors don't cause the effective scrub radius to change signs. Right now, this latter concept makes sense to me...