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Apex Arc8 wheels to e46 m3

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  • Nic01101011
    replied
    Originally posted by 325ix View Post
    Fr = μN

    where:

    •Fr is the resistive force of friction
    •μ is the coefficient of friction for the two surfaces (Greek letter "mu")
    •N is the normal or perpendicular force pushing the two objects together
    •μN is μ times N
    Fr and N are measured in units of force, which are pounds or newtons. μ is a number between 0 (zero) and ∞ (infinity).
    Taken from http://www.school-for-champions.com/...n_equation.htm

    I'll explain a little better when I can get to my school notes. As you can see though, there is no varible for surface area or contact patch. It's the extra weight of the wider wheel/tire combo that gets you the extra traction.
    high school / GE lower div college level physics dont explain much in the real world.
    Even grad level dynamics courses only explain the behavior of nothing more than simplified models..

    Long story short, your coefficient of friction isn't simply a static number, and does depends on overall contact patch area.
    Last edited by Nic01101011; 05-06-2010, 07:36 PM.

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  • E30_Pare
    replied
    I like how this turned from a pchop to a physics lecture.

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  • 325ix
    replied
    ^oops wrong one. I'll grab my physics stuff at school tomorrow and post up the formulas.

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  • Be30mer
    replied
    Originally posted by 325ix View Post
    Fr = μN

    where:

    •Fr is the resistive force of friction
    •μ is the coefficient of friction for the two surfaces (Greek letter "mu")
    •N is the normal or perpendicular force pushing the two objects together
    •μN is μ times N
    Fr and N are measured in units of force, which are pounds or newtons. μ is a number between 0 (zero) and ∞ (infinity).
    Taken from http://www.school-for-champions.com/...n_equation.htm

    I'll explain a little better when I can get to my school notes. As you can see though, there is no varible for surface area or contact patch. It's the extra weight of the wider wheel/tire combo that gets you the extra traction.
    ^^ thats for static friction. I think area plays a role in kinetic friction, but im a little dusty in the physics department. I do remember that the coefficient of friction M= force of friction/ normal force, where the normal force is just mass in kilograms x acceleration from gravity (9.8m/s/s). I cant remember if there was any specific formula other than that ^^ to solve for the force of friction, and cant remember much about kinetic friction.

    Leave a comment:


  • 325ix
    replied
    Fr = μN

    where:

    •Fr is the resistive force of friction
    •μ is the coefficient of friction for the two surfaces (Greek letter "mu")
    •N is the normal or perpendicular force pushing the two objects together
    •μN is μ times N
    Fr and N are measured in units of force, which are pounds or newtons. μ is a number between 0 (zero) and ∞ (infinity).
    Taken from http://www.school-for-champions.com/...n_equation.htm

    I'll explain a little better when I can get to my school notes. As you can see though, there is no varible for surface area or contact patch. It's the extra weight of the wider wheel/tire combo that gets you the extra traction.

    Leave a comment:


  • Be30mer
    replied
    Originally posted by 325ix View Post
    no it's not. I learned about traction and such in physics and area of contact isn't even in the formula.
    Than explain. Because I calculate, the tires have about 6-8 (ill say 7) inches of contact in y direction and 8-10 inches in x depending on width of tire.
    7x8x4= 224 inches squared of contact area for all tires.
    7x10x4= 280 inches
    280-224= 56
    64 was a close estimate.
    Of course, I am basing this assumption off the idea that
    More area = more traction. << Is that not true?
    But yes I want the arcs because they look awesome as well.

    Leave a comment:


  • 325ix
    replied
    Originally posted by yberther View Post
    lol I don't think that's how it works...

    arc's look sweetest.
    no it's not. I learned about traction and such in physics and area of contact isn't even in the formula.

    Leave a comment:


  • yberther
    replied
    Originally posted by Be30mer View Post
    I wanted to get csl styled wheels with more traction than the stock ones. The stock ones are 8 inches and arc8's are 9.5-10 inches. Thats like 64 square inches of contact difference.
    lol I don't think that's how it works...

    arc's look sweetest.

    Leave a comment:


  • Be30mer
    replied
    Originally posted by Wh33lhop View Post
    I'd just go with CSL/ZCP wheels or replicas, I think they make reps that are a bit wider if you're so keen on it.

    If you go through all this trouble to find wider wheels, you had better not try and stretch some 225s on them.
    I found some replicas on ebay for like 700 bucks for all 4 wheels, but im not sure of the quality of the wheels.
    And I would never stretch tires on an m3. NEVER

    Originally posted by PaintPro21 View Post
    The VMR Reps are cast and heavier then the oem wheels. The ARC-8 wheels are flow-formed, light-weight, and VIA tested/certified in Japan.

    I don't have a photo of a silver M3 running our black M3 fitment ARC-8's but on our facebook fan page you can see a bunch of combinations of vehicles and wheel colors
    I love the way your wheels look. I will definitely put apex on the top of my list for now.

    Leave a comment:


  • Bishop
    replied
    Hyper silver is probably as close as you're going to get... Or, OP if you like the color of my Apex's, it's the hyper black.. I love the color

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  • 325ix
    replied
    I think the apexs would look good in the stock color.

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  • Beastolizer
    replied
    Originally posted by Bishop View Post
    Black ARC's

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  • PaintPro21
    replied
    The VMR Reps are cast and heavier then the oem wheels. The ARC-8 wheels are flow-formed, light-weight, and VIA tested/certified in Japan.

    Here's a picture of an E46 running the black wheels. The car behind it is running the silver ARC-'s




    Here's a while car running the black wheels.



    I don't have a photo of a silver M3 running our black M3 fitment ARC-8's but on our facebook fan page you can see a bunch of combinations of vehicles and wheel colors

    Leave a comment:


  • Wh33lhop
    replied
    I'd just go with CSL/ZCP wheels or replicas, I think they make reps that are a bit wider if you're so keen on it.

    If you go through all this trouble to find wider wheels, you had better not try and stretch some 225s on them.

    Leave a comment:


  • robmespeedy
    replied
    Fully Forged Wheels from $579, Flow Formed Wheels from $345. Classic Clast Wheels. CNC machined for BMW, Tesla, Audi, Volkswagen, and beyond. Single Piece Monoblock Forged Wheels, Flow Formed Lightweight Alloy Rims, Custom Powdercoat Rims located in California. Free Domestic Shipping

    Leave a comment:

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