OK. Let's see if I can keep up here.
I understand how a truck on flat ground is not applying more weight to the front wheels. The trucks wheels are level and the rear wheels would need to move physically higher than the front wheels to make that happen. For the marble... The "ground" is actually the truck bed. What puzzles me, is how a non-roling load would be affected. A flat box in the bed of a raked truck is feeling the same force as the marble right? Obviously friction is a lot higher but is the force the same?
Let me start off by stating: I am not saying the rake of a chassis doesn't affect things like brake dive and weight transfer - it does, and I have provided multiple reasons why. What I am trying to explain is the reason behind that, which is predominantly suspension geometry changes, and not because the truck is less "visual heavy" in the front.
Back to the marble - you nailed it, the marble is on a sloped ground, which is why I said it's a bad analogy (truck is on level ground). That's like parking our truck on a hill. In these two cases, yes, there's a very large change in axle weight. Put it this way:
- A truck with a 10 degree rake, on level ground, has a very low axle weight change, maybe 10 to 20 lbs or so heavier in the front.
- A truck parked on a 10 degree slope, with the brakes applied, has a very high axle weight change. Depending on the CG, we're talking 500 lbs heavier in the front, and 500 less on the rear! This is akin to a marble sitting in the truck of the first bullet.
It's tedious to explain in words, but if I were to draw it out, then it becomes clear - the 10 degree force vector is acting on two completely different moment arms.
On a parked truck with a rake (which is essentially a hill), a marble and box experiences that exact same force. Only different is the marble starts rolling. Once it hits the front of the bed (or if you glue it), it comes to rest, and then acts identical to the box sitting on the bed. Both are not moving, experiencing a static force of sin(angle of rake), which is countered by friction (box), or the front of the bed (marble at rest).
But again, let's not focus on this too much, because it has nothing to the forces the truck ITSELF experiences with a raked chassis.
Hhhhmmmmm... "minutely" eh? It's been my experience that "minute" movements can become "significant" in heavy vehicles as speeds rise.
Not speed, but acceleration (all directions, forward, reverse, lateral, and even vertical).
When I say minute, it's relative. A 5 degree rake is minute compared to say, installing springs with 3 times the spring rate...
Also, our truck generates relatively low acceleration (in terms of g-force), which makes things minute. An F1 car doing a 5g threshold brake, may see more weight transfer variance with different chassis rake angles, but our truck at .65g won't see nearly as much!
Sounds right. In the GMT800 Chevy's the Lower Control Arm angles start to resist brake dive (and bump compression) as you crank the torsion bars. But yes, this is a result of suspension design and other vehicles may perform differently.
Ah, I didn't realize you were referring to a GMT800 (should've looked at your avatar!). I was thinking a solid front axle with radius arms the whole time.
On the GM IFS, the anti-dive geometry is built into the control arm mounting mounts itself. If you look at your front suspension from the side, you'll see the upper/lower control arm tilts at an upward angle. Since this angle, relative to the frame, is unchanged, we won't see any anti-dive improvements here.
But what does happen, is an increase in
lateral roll center, since the control arms are at a sharper angle. This doesn't directly affect dive, which depends on
longitudinal roll center, however, the sharper control arm angle increases the affect spring rate of the torsion bars, as the moment arm changes.
If we take it to an imaginary extreme, and have the control arms dangle straight down somehow, then the spring rate would be infinite, and have zero brake dive.
I have more experience with sports cars and I totally believe that rake has little effect there. However, when talking about trucks don't you think the weight of the truck, the truck's increased ride height and the trucks softer spring rates and much greater suspension travel would all serve to magnify those forces compared to a sports car?
It sure does, under DYNAMIC situations. That's why I was very clear on distinguishing the static and dynamic weight transfers of a raked chassis.
What I was saying, is that the static weight transfer of a chassis rake is very very small, and equally small for both a lightweight sportscar and heavy truck, as suspension travel / CG / mass does not matter in a static situation.
I think your observations are correct but there might be other conclusions. EG: Stock truck pitches forward at X degrees angle to the road under hard braking. Lifted truck pitches forward at (X-Y) degrees to the road. With the weight of a truck that Yº more of angle might create considerable force.
Very good point you brought up, and this is where we go back to the marble / truck parked on a hill situation.
The truck itself experiences very little force difference due to a rake, this is what I've been trying to explain. However, you as the passenger, can experience a much larger difference in force (between a raked and level truck). You are the marble sitting in the bed.
But this change in force is a vector change, not magnitude change. I'll explain: in an extreme case, say a truck with 30 degree rake, you're already fighting gravity. Your seat belt digs into your very hard even sitting there, because you're almost sliding off your seat.
If you were to brake at 1g in this truck, the seatbelt is downright painfull, because it has to hold 1 g, plus the force generated by a slope truck.
However, the TRUCK chassis doesn't know that! It still "feels" only the 1g. The rake has very little affect on IT.
On the other hand, if you have a -30 degree rake (squat), your seatbelt is hardly doing anything, as you're leaned back in your seat. If you did a 1g stop, you'll barely feel the seat belt, as it only has to hold back around .25g.
This is why a leveling kit gives
us, the cargo of the truck, a perceived improvement in brake dive. But it's important to realize it's only perceived, and is not felt by the truck chassis/tires...
Beyond the theory I can only offer personal observations. Since leveling my GMT800 the handling and braking when empty has improved. The front suspension does not feel overloaded when braking in a turn and there is much more rear wheel traction in the snow. I should note that it took three or four tries to determine the best compromise of front lift versus ride quality.
Matt
Absolutely.
Like I said , I'm only trying to explain the theory of static weight transfer on the axles with a given rake angle (which is small). In real life dynamic situations, there are many more factors in play, some which may be perceived from the driver's seat.
Perhaps you're hitting the bump stops less, or in the increase in roll center reduced your front end body roll. There're many reasons why a level kit can make a truck feel better (at the cost of payload and aerodynamics).