Tyre "reaction time" in the wet?

Tyre "reaction time" in the wet?

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Discussion

MartinM

Original Poster:

494 posts

208 months

Saturday 5th May 2007
quotequote all
Can anyone give me a rough idea of how much longer a tyres take to react to steering input in the wet as opposed to the widely accepted 0.25secs in the dry?

Cheers
Martin

GreenV8S

30,213 posts

285 months

Sunday 6th May 2007
quotequote all
MartinM said:
Can anyone give me a rough idea of how much longer a tyres take to react to steering input in the wet as opposed to the widely accepted 0.25secs in the dry?

Cheers
Martin


Why should it take any longer in the wet? I don't know where the 0.25 figure comes from or how widely accepted that is, but I'd expect most of the delay to come from the time taken to build up lateral deflection in the sidewall and suspension bushes. This deflection would be proportion to load applied, if anything it should be less in the wet since the loads will be lower. The time taken for the body to yaw and roll will usually be much longer than this anyway, surely that is more important?

TripleS

4,294 posts

243 months

Sunday 6th May 2007
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Does it really matter anyhow?

I must say I'm very sceptical about these references to a 0.25 second delay. Are we sure it's not 0.2 or 0.3 seconds? rolleyes

Surely it varies according to quite a range of factors, so can we really settle on a figure and make any use of it? I suspect not.

Given that Reg advises us to apply steering input gently at first and then a bit more rapidly - rather like the varying intensity of braking - it hardly seems important to me. In any case I don't think we want to be jerking a car into the bends. Ease it in smoothly and gently, and you're less likely to come unstuck, I would say.

Best wishes all,
Dave.

MartinM

Original Poster:

494 posts

208 months

Sunday 6th May 2007
quotequote all
Ok, i probably didnt word it right. What i was getting at was how much longer percentage wise would people estimate it takes the steering tyres to achieve maximum grip in the wet.
The quarter second reference comes from Don Palmer.

GreenV8S

30,213 posts

285 months

Sunday 6th May 2007
quotequote all
MartinM said:
Ok, i probably didnt word it right. What i was getting at was how much longer percentage wise would people estimate it takes the steering tyres to achieve maximum grip in the wet.
The quarter second reference comes from Don Palmer.


I still don't get why you're asking, but my answer is that it makes no difference at all since the delay you're talking about is a property of the tyre and suspension bushes not of the level of grip available.

WhoseGeneration

4,090 posts

208 months

Sunday 6th May 2007
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Define "Wet", for a start.

StressedDave

839 posts

263 months

Monday 7th May 2007
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You are dealing with a few separate effects here:

1. Tyre relaxation length - this is the distance rolled by a tyre between the generation of a slip angle (i.e. you applying the steering) and the tyre generating the full force related to that slip angle. This is about one circumference of the tyre, so makes a lot more difference at 2 mph compared with 30 mph.

2. Transient handling - the time taken from the initial application of steering to the car settling down to a steady state of cornering. This is a function of the suspension design (both spring and damper rates and the geometry) and as the Hairy Don says, it's around a quarter of a second, but it varies between cars.

If you notice, neither of these things relies on the coefficient of friction between the tyre and the road and are effectively unchanged in the wet.