![]() |
|
|
#12 |
|
"Rashid Naimi"
Oct 2015
Remote to Here/There
3·5·137 Posts |
Steering from the back is generally more efficient and allows tighter turns. The only good reason for cars to steer from the front is as explanted with rear drive early design complexity. If cars were designed to steer from the front it would make parallel parking much easier (no need to back up). One engineering issue that would have to be tackled is that tighter on the dine turns would make the vehicles less stable at high speeds.
ETA A few years ago one of the car manufacturers (Honda, I think) advertised a feature were back wheels would partially rotate to facilitate turning. It was never repeated or continued, I assume due to instability issues at high speeds. I have heard that fire engines do have rear steering capabilities. Last fiddled with by a1call on 2018-06-11 at 11:45 |
|
|
|
|
|
#13 |
|
Feb 2016
! North_America
83 Posts |
-Couldn't collect my thought in a structured way. Lots of ideas, all related.- Using friction and drag almost interchangeable, not sure.
I think it related to friction, how easy it is to turn the vehicle. Most of the drag will occur at the wheels, and by changing the front wheel's direction, the rear ones are enforcing it at the back. Only 2 places with support, so the 'turning support' will be one of it. In non-ground vehicles, the weight center is the seesaw's support, since the weight distribution is more significant with less friction, and "force are accelerating weights". And unless you are touching the ground, you can only rely on friction - indirect steering (or different force directions in space). It is a lot harder to turn when you are not touching anything, cars don't need the help of rear steering. When using a not ground vehicle, it is pushing back either the surronding material (water, air) or drop material to push itself away (space). Newton 3. So propulsion should be at the back to avoid moving more material than needed (pushing the front instead of pullinng the back). And steering with drag still uses Newton 3. Last fiddled with by thyw on 2018-06-12 at 04:25 |
|
|
|
|
|
#14 |
|
Undefined
"The unspeakable one"
Jun 2006
My evil lair
22×1,549 Posts |
Yes.
If the thing you push against is moving (water, air, or slippery wheels on a surface (like ice for example)) or non-existent (space (i.e. your own exhaust)) then steer from the back. If the thing you push against doesn't move (solid ground with good grip) then steer from the front. And, yes, of course, you can do the opposite if you wish to, but you make your life more difficult with regards to steering and stability. |
|
|
|
|
|
#15 | ||
|
"Kieren"
Jul 2011
In My Own Galaxy!
2×3×1,693 Posts |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dymaxion_car
Quote:
BTW: The car Retina mentioned was the Honda Prelude. Quote:
|
||
|
|
|