Norm Peterson
corner barstool sitter
All else the same including the static geo RC height, that's what I would expect.So then, in conceptual terms (no numbers) is a chassis mounted watts link going to be less stable (towards oversteer) under braking while turning and more stable under (towards understeer) acceleration while turning due to the change in RC height above the ground even though the RC remains fixed relative to the CG? Or is that over simplifying what is going on a little too much?
In the S197, the variation of axle roll steer with rear ride height is slightly slower with the diff-mounted Watts. This effect would be additive to the above (also being looser in, tighter off). Mid-corner/steady-state understeer/oversteer balance with a diff-mounted Watts ought to be just a little less sensitive to the throttle. Of course if you're good enough to notice the difference . . .
Possibly.I guess what I'm asking is, would a Fays2 be better in situations where more rotation is necessary under braking but more grip for acceleration compared to a differential mounted unit?
It affects how much total load transfer happens. All else equal, the greater the lateral load transfer (which ties up X amount of the tire's total grip), the less remains for longitudinal. If you let the rear RC drop slightly on corner exit, you're transferring less load through the rear RC leaving a tiny bit more for forward acceleration.My assumption is that with a fixed RC relative to the CG (chassis mounted watts) that your roll contributed to that "arm" between the RC and CG is constant. I get that, but given both, how does the RC height (again, still fixed relative to the CG at all points in roll) above the ground translate into grip under braking and acceleration?
Or if you start with braking causing the rear RC to rise slightly, the forward load transfer limits the rear tire total grip and the higher rear RC means that the rear lateral grip that remains gets "eaten up" quicker (IOW, the tire would run out of grip at a lower lat-g).
The stiffer your rear springs are, the smaller these differences will be and the closer the behavior of the two Watts arrangements should be to each other. Less ride height variation and less axle steer variation right off. Less roll if you're also rebalancing the front to suit stiffer rear springs (which you might do if you were trying to keep the same sta-bar or bar setting).
Norm