Originally posted by RdstrBlk
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Lol, why? Thats how we get our power to the ground! Imagine a fwd motorbike... yould need weight in front of the front tire to keep it down so you can accelerate.
Originally posted by RdstrBlk
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My first question would be how would you get a 6x4 and 12x2 patch on the same car? In the second quote it says wider tires have a shorter contact patch but isnt that because they have less psi on the contact patch to deflect them?
I think (but i dont know) that you would have to get a much taller and narrow tire to accomplish that difference on the same car and that would change a ton of other things.
Can you tell me how that works if im not understanding this?
The way i see it any tire with the same sidewall hight, made out of the same materiel and having the same diameter will have the same length of contact patch if you exert the force required to have the same psi on the contact patch regardless of width.
The reason wider tires get a shorter patch is because there is less psi to deflect the tire right?
Also its not quite as simple as he says, this tire will have a different contact patch size than this one because of the tread pattern:
And all this is about why wider tires are better. What if 185's are wide tires for our car?
With the slip angle- thats different for different styles of suspension and its why we use negative camber. So to put it basically lets say we have a 165 tire with lots of negative camber and the majority of the weight is only on half the "contact patch" at rest. That gives optimal accelleration traction because 165 is too wide lets say and the pressure would be too low. So essentially you have 1 tire width on the ground when your going in a straight line.
Then you go to corner and that negative camber flattens out on the outside tire so its level lets say. All the weight from the inside tire transferrs to the outside one and you have the same contact patch psi as you did going in a straight line. You also have the same contact patch size on the ground.
Wider tires giving more responsive handling and feel has more than just contact patch at play. Wider tires basically always stick out farther because you cant go in. Its like outriggers on a crane. Much more stable. If you took the narrower tires and put them on rims that stuck them out as far as the wide ones or used wheel spacers you would gain much (but perhaps not all) of the same feel.
Also optimum contact patch pressure is different on the same tire depending on what temperature the tire is. As it warms up it gets grippier to a point. Once it overheats you loose traction.
So toonarrow of a tire can overheat easy if you drive it hard, but too wide a tire might never warm up enough to give you optimal traction. Thats another reason for using different tire widths on non-awd cars.
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