rbenn2
Automotive
- Apr 13, 2014
- 1
This is the first question I have posted on this forum. Not sure if I'm qualified to be here. Background: BS in computer science. I started off as a mechanical engineering major but switched to CS somewhat short of my junior year. So I have enough knowledge to be dangerous. I also spent about 30 years in an aerospace engineering environment (so I claim to know how to talk to real engineers).
Right now I'm interested in the lateral loading of tires during cornering. If you draw a FBD of a simple axle under lateral load, the lateral force contributed by each tire is statically indeterminate, dependent on tire sidewall lateral stiffness. I'm willing to assume this stiffness does not change very much with variations in vertical load due to weight transfer (bad assumption?), and thus, up until the limit of adhesion of the inside tire (<< less than the ultimate cornering load), both inboard and outboard tires contribute roughly the same lateral force.
Is this correct? It seems somewhat counter-intuitive.
P.S. I'm trying to determine the worst-case moment seen by wheel bearings given varying wheel offsets.
Right now I'm interested in the lateral loading of tires during cornering. If you draw a FBD of a simple axle under lateral load, the lateral force contributed by each tire is statically indeterminate, dependent on tire sidewall lateral stiffness. I'm willing to assume this stiffness does not change very much with variations in vertical load due to weight transfer (bad assumption?), and thus, up until the limit of adhesion of the inside tire (<< less than the ultimate cornering load), both inboard and outboard tires contribute roughly the same lateral force.
Is this correct? It seems somewhat counter-intuitive.
P.S. I'm trying to determine the worst-case moment seen by wheel bearings given varying wheel offsets.