rocky&bullwinkle wrote:
It now seems more predicable in the corners if that makes sense.
Yep.. thats what rear toe does.. toe out makes them want to turn, toe in makes them resist turning
If you pretend that a car only uses the left side wheels on a right-hand corner (IE where the weight has transferred to), then with toe in at the back, the wheels are like this
Front = /
Rear = /
So you need to steer more to make the difference in the angle of the front wheel more than the back
But with toe out at the back, the wheels are like this
Front = /
Rear = \
It takes much less steering input to get the car to turn, basically even when the front wheels are pointing straight, if there is any weight transfer to either side, the rear will steer - good for turning, bad for stability
Cars with 4 wheel steering are fun to drive, late 80's Honda Preludes (the boxy ones) steered the rear wheels the opposite direction to the front, making turns really tight - so much fun to go around roundabouts - really sticky!
I forget which cars (R33 GTR? Mazda MX6? probably lots) had 4WS that was dynamic, at low speed the wheels turned the opposite direction to the fronts to make the car turn quickly, but the same direction as the front at speed, to make them more stable.
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