I was testing brake bias on GT3 cars (Ferrari, Porsche) yesterday and i found this:
When rear wheels lock first, huge oversteer.
When both wheels lock at the same time, huge oversteer.
At this point, setting brake bias more to the front makes the front wheels to lock first, but the car keeps oversteering.
To get understeer effect i need to put much more brake bias to the front from this point, the fact that the front wheels are locking first is not enough to reach understeer.
Do you think it is realistic or is it a physics issue that at some point, the front wheels lock first while you still get a lot of oversteer as if the rear wheels were locking first?
When rear wheels lock first, huge oversteer.
When both wheels lock at the same time, huge oversteer.
At this point, setting brake bias more to the front makes the front wheels to lock first, but the car keeps oversteering.
To get understeer effect i need to put much more brake bias to the front from this point, the fact that the front wheels are locking first is not enough to reach understeer.
Do you think it is realistic or is it a physics issue that at some point, the front wheels lock first while you still get a lot of oversteer as if the rear wheels were locking first?