SafeSpeed wrote:
The front/rear blow out question depends on what you're going to do with the brake. If you're going to panic and brake then a front wheel blow-out is pretty bad. When the weight transfers forward, one side drops and the steering might go anywhere. But if you're panic braking then a rear wheel blow out is minimised .
On the other hand, if you're not going to panic brake the rear wheel blow out is far more likely to cause a spin.
oooh.. just to stick my oar in here (as a vehicle dynamicist).
i generally agree.
if you lose a tyre you lose its ability to generate stabilising lateral forces, in the same was as locking or spinning a wheel. in braking legislation the front wheels _must_ lock first (base brakes, no abs) as this is considered the safe condition, i.e. vehicle goes in predictable straight line. if the back wheels lock you lose lateral stability on the rear so it oversteers, or the back end is brought round by any small disturbance.
so on that basis losing half your lateral stability on the front gives the more predictable response. how the steering itself responds would vary on dependant on the vehicle's steering & suspension geometry so it's hard to generalise.
as for braking with a blowout obviously you are now lacking the brake forces from that tyre so any braking is going to be uneven and start to spin the car. since the majority of braking force comes from the front the effect would be more severe with a front blowout.
(it's this aspect that worried me most about driver's response to a blowout, most peoples initial reaction is likely to be to get stationary as quickly as possible)
so keeping it gentle to give yourself time to compensate with the steering would be the key.
i've often wondered about using the handbrake (gently!) in a front blowout condition to slow the vehicle since that would give a balanced braking force at the rear, albeit at the risk of reduced stability on the rear.
fortunately i've not needed to test this theory to date!
ok, carry on as you were
