Scaff
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- ScaffUK
Wolfe2x7Actually, no, you've just finally understood what it is I'm saying.![]()
I've always felt that the lack of oversteer was the biggest problem in GT4.
If your car is too grippy to oversteer, then "realistic" understeer is too severe, is it not?That's where my "GT4's understeer is too much" came from. The lack of proper oversteer characteristics almost forces you to understeer like crazy.
Well sort of, while underster and oversteer are of course related and a car at any given moment has a balance of either understeer, oversteer or neutral, these do not have to be a result of any loss of grip. Using grip (or lack of it) to explain balance is an overly simplistic approach, one that works, but is not the full picture.
The true definition is a result of a relationship between the front and rear slip of the tyre.
So:
Front slip > Rear slip = Understeer
Front slip = Rear slip = Neutral
Front slip < Rear slip = Oversteer
This occurs regardless of if the tyre(s) are above or below their slip limit of grip. So a car can be in a state of understeer or oversteer while still retaining grip at all corners, or neutral while all four tyres are well over the slip limit of grip (the famed four wheel drift).
What also needs to be considered is that the active forces placed on a tyre are not just the slip angle (a result of cornering forces) but also slip percentages (a result of accelerative forces increaseing or decreasing). As such the forces on the rear of a FWD car will almost always be relatively low in comparison to the front tyres. Simply because the front tyres have to cope with both steering and acceleration (or the majority of braking) while the rears will have only lower cornering loads with possiably lower braking loads. Additionally as the front tyres are of course directly steered they can reach a much greater slip angle than rear tyres simply by the use of the steering wheel itself (I know it sounds obvious, but it is often forgotten).
So while Wolfe's point hold some water in regard to RWD cars, it does not hold such a strong position in regard to FWD cars. In fact it supports the position that GT4 better represents the very high forces being placed on FWD cars during hard cornering with heavy braking or accelerative loads. Quite simply the combined slip angle and percentage placed on the front tyres in these circumstances is always going to be far higher than those opperating on the rear tyres. Significantly higher front slip in relation to rear slip = massive understeer.
That is however just looking at the effect of tyre slip loads and the front rear relationship, a lot more is going on here than that.
Regards
Scaff