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Old 05-18-2011, 10:03 AM
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Dell Dell is offline
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Default Re: Close Call at South Bend

Slip angle is probably easier to explain over a beer

However, the quick explanation is that when you deform the contact patch the tire (lateral load) will travel in a direction not the same as the direction of travel of wheel input. As counter-intuitive as it seems, you actually WANT to deform the contact patch. Grip will INCREASE as you deviate from a delta of 0 degrees. However, there is a limit for each tire. Could be as little as a couple degrees up to as much as 6, 7, or more depending on the type of tire (i.e., slick vs. DOT-R vs. street). Your goal is to take that slip angle to the limit and NOT cross over. This premise is the very reason why weight transfer is the enemy. The more weight transfer, the more lateral load you generate and thus quickly exceed the slip angle. Once you get a good feel for what the slip angle is for your specific car and setup you can take the car right up to it and then modulate throttle, brake, steering angle, to dance on that line.

**rest of reply edited for discussion over beer **

Last edited by Dell; 05-18-2011 at 08:54 PM.
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Old 05-18-2011, 10:43 AM
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bman bman is offline
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Default Re: Close Call at South Bend

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dell View Post
Slip angle is probably easier to explain over a beer
I hope so....

Thanks! I am with you.

I have been working a lot on feeling the chassis. Trying to be more aware of weight transfer and balance while braking, coming off brake and applying throttle. But everything with me is feel.....
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