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Doc Al
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Not sure what you mean, but friction is surely providing the "driving force" to accelerate the car. Put the car on a frictionless surface and you can step on the gas all you want--the tires will simply spin.twowheelsbg said:Why do the these friction forces are classified as 'ground to tires' ?
This implies that they are pushung back and acting as driving force, which is not correct.
Internal forces act to turn the tires. Friction acts to prevent slipping; in so doing, it pushes the car forward.It seems to me that these static friction forces are just counter forces to the driving momentum forces trying to rotate the wheel, emerging into the contact point, no parallel to Neuton third law is rellevant.