Matty wrote:Weight transfer is a function of centre of gravity height, cornering acceleration and track width. It has (almost) nothing to do with body roll - a go-kart still gets weight transfer occurring.
I would assume that body roll is a result of weight transfer and its effect on the springs/dampners/tyres/sways etc.
Matty wrote:Adding a rear sway bar (increasing rear roll stiffness) is going to want to cock the inside rear wheel up....2) the outside rear gets more weight on it. Tyres have a coefficient of friction that decreases as you put more weight on them. So the upshot is the rear has less grip (and at the same time the front gets more grip because there is less weight transfer going on there) - so you end up with oversteer.
I understand that an after market stiffer rear sway will increase oversteer, because there's more weight transfer to the outside rear wheel and it can "let go". Never doubted that.
Matty wrote:Adding a rear sway bar (increasing rear roll stiffness) is going to want to cock the inside rear wheel up
See this is the one bit I don't understand (especially since we're talking about picking the inside wheel up and not about over steer), how does increasing the rear roll stiffness make the car want to cock up the inside rear wheel more? If the rear of the car hasn't rolled as much wouldn't the inside wheel be closer to the height of the outside wheel?