Keith Tanner said:
In order to understand real world changes, you have to understand the basic mechanics in an idealized system. It's like the frictionless surface often used in teaching physics, we know it doesn't exist but it simplifies the math and the understanding. By coming up with a simplified mental model, it's easier to understand the relationship of the various factors. THEN you can start dealing with the messier real world. When someone's trying to figure out how something works, it's much better to strip it down than to say "it's just too hard". We're not really tuning a real car here, it's a theoretical construct.
I never said that roll stiffness was a function of roll angle. Roll angle does not affect weight transfer*. It's a visible result of it as the suspension reacts to the change in loading. You can have 1g lateral acceleration and the associated weight transfer with zero roll, just ask a kart racer.
Roll centers can certainly stay put with roll, it depends on the suspension type. Check out a Watts linkage. But again, in the simplified idealized system we can just say "it doesn't move" and that serves our purpose.
I definitely never said the original question was meaningless. It's a good question, I might have to go back and do some figuring on what that steering axle will do to the balance in this situation.
* yes, yes, the lateral CG movement may have some effect on weight transfer but it's such a trivially small amount that you can ignore it.
Roll angle does not affect weight transfer*
Of course it does, it's how roll stiffness is expressed, in torque about the roll axis per degree of angular displacement. That torque is the moment equal to the difference in wheel weights times the distance between wheel centers, commonly called 'weight transfer'.
You can have 1g lateral acceleration and the associated weight transfer with zero roll, just ask a kart racer.
On a theoretically perfect kart having an infinitely stiff chassis and solid non deforming wheels, the roll stiffness is infinite.
Ask a kart racer about lifting the inside front wheel, or the relative effects of tire pressures on chassis tuning. The suspension is there, comprising the flex in the chassis and the spring effects of pnuematic tires., as well as the effects of driver movement on the CoG. The roll stiffness is rather high, but it exists and is calculable.
I agree with you that ideal theory can be useful in understanding real world behavior. And as you say, part of that understanding process involves moving from 'ideal' behavior to 'observed' behavior, to gain actionable insights about how and why they differ, that we can apply to making our cars go faster.