spyderCodes
Member
I think I have an idea of how the various parts of the VSS (Vehicle Stability System) work, but I really didn't know why it was so important on the Spyder.
Almost every on line explanation of how the VSS worked had wording to the effect of "due to the inherent instability of the configuration ...".
What made it inherently unstable?
And what does that mean?
I have only a bare understanding of vehicle handling terms like oversteer and und understeer.
I tend to just think about something else when those terms start flying around.
But back to the question of what is unstable about the Spyder's configuration?
I called an old friend of mine. Paul who lives in California and sets up suspensions for race cars and even has done a bit of consulting with Bosch, though NOT on the Spyder's system.
Knowing my limitations, he explained it to me this way.
The two wheels in the front with their wide stance are much, much more sticky to the road than the single wheel in the back.
Sticky to the road must be one of those technical terms.
Because of this, the rear wheel tends to want to pivot around the two anchored front wheels when given half a chance.
The big wide rear tire helps, but it would take a massively wide one to compensate completely.
That's why VSS is a must.
It intervenes and makes sure the rear wheel stays where it should in relation to the front.
The modern electronic wizardry of VSS takes an inherently unstable configuration and makes it stable.
The explanation could get loads more complicated but that seems to make sense to me.
Almost every on line explanation of how the VSS worked had wording to the effect of "due to the inherent instability of the configuration ...".
What made it inherently unstable?
And what does that mean?
I have only a bare understanding of vehicle handling terms like oversteer and und understeer.
I tend to just think about something else when those terms start flying around.
But back to the question of what is unstable about the Spyder's configuration?
I called an old friend of mine. Paul who lives in California and sets up suspensions for race cars and even has done a bit of consulting with Bosch, though NOT on the Spyder's system.
Knowing my limitations, he explained it to me this way.
The two wheels in the front with their wide stance are much, much more sticky to the road than the single wheel in the back.
Sticky to the road must be one of those technical terms.
Because of this, the rear wheel tends to want to pivot around the two anchored front wheels when given half a chance.
The big wide rear tire helps, but it would take a massively wide one to compensate completely.
That's why VSS is a must.
It intervenes and makes sure the rear wheel stays where it should in relation to the front.
The modern electronic wizardry of VSS takes an inherently unstable configuration and makes it stable.
The explanation could get loads more complicated but that seems to make sense to me.
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