- #1
DannoXYZ
- 69
- 16
I've witnessed 1st-hand with my own eyeballs this guy riding an S-shaped path through chicane at Thunderhill East+West 5-mile combined course with front-wheel IN THE AIR! I believe bike is a Yamaha TZ250, 100-120bhp and 200-lbs weight.
I conducted an experiment to document behavior of single motorcycle wheel using my spare back wheel:
- 17x4" vRossi rear wheel
- 150/60-17 Dunlop Alpha 13-SP rear tyre
- 26 psi tyre pressure
TEST #1 - upright tyre
I stood wheel upright and shoved it down pit lane. It rolled quite a distance with minimal deceleration before finally slowing down enough to fall over. Rough estimate of distance is about 200-ft when I walked down to fetch it.
TEST #2 - leaning tyre
In this test, I stood up wheel about 20-degrees inclined from vertical and shoved it just like before. This time, wheel rolled in decreasing-radius circle (initial one about 20ft radius) in front of me with rapid deceleration and fell over much sooner than straightaway test.Both tests conducted 3x each with similar results. Test #2 confirms what I already knew about cornering, that is it's an energy-consuming action. There is no conservation of energy or momentum, active power is required to be put into system in order for bike to continue around curve at constant speed. Centripetal force required to push bike into curved path comes from scrubbing and distorting tyres and additional power is required to maintain constant speed (more throttle is required compared to same speed in straight line). Ok, let's leave regular 2-wheeled cornering alone for now.
Please discuss what forces and effects come into play when single motorcycle tyre carves curved path... and then reverses curve in other direction. Any applicable equations would be great. Especially if it can predict radius of curve for various lean-angles and speeds of single tyre. Should probably also account for vertical loading of tyre and applied power as these affects size and shape of contact patch.
I conducted an experiment to document behavior of single motorcycle wheel using my spare back wheel:
- 17x4" vRossi rear wheel
- 150/60-17 Dunlop Alpha 13-SP rear tyre
- 26 psi tyre pressure
TEST #1 - upright tyre
I stood wheel upright and shoved it down pit lane. It rolled quite a distance with minimal deceleration before finally slowing down enough to fall over. Rough estimate of distance is about 200-ft when I walked down to fetch it.
TEST #2 - leaning tyre
In this test, I stood up wheel about 20-degrees inclined from vertical and shoved it just like before. This time, wheel rolled in decreasing-radius circle (initial one about 20ft radius) in front of me with rapid deceleration and fell over much sooner than straightaway test.Both tests conducted 3x each with similar results. Test #2 confirms what I already knew about cornering, that is it's an energy-consuming action. There is no conservation of energy or momentum, active power is required to be put into system in order for bike to continue around curve at constant speed. Centripetal force required to push bike into curved path comes from scrubbing and distorting tyres and additional power is required to maintain constant speed (more throttle is required compared to same speed in straight line). Ok, let's leave regular 2-wheeled cornering alone for now.
Please discuss what forces and effects come into play when single motorcycle tyre carves curved path... and then reverses curve in other direction. Any applicable equations would be great. Especially if it can predict radius of curve for various lean-angles and speeds of single tyre. Should probably also account for vertical loading of tyre and applied power as these affects size and shape of contact patch.
Last edited: