What matters to the vehicle dynamics of a car or truck is referred to as k' (Kay prime). It is [ the ratio of the Z (yaw) inertia to the vehicle mass -1.0 ]. A value of zero gives you a bar bell. This factor is the player which determines what tire and suspension properties are needed to deliver prescribed Steering Gain, yaw overshoot (yaw damping) and lateral acceleration response time. THESE factors are usually determined by 'competitive assessment' (i.e. what do drivers want or prefer in a designated 'handling emphasized' market slice. A synthesis done by determining the tire and suspension properties necessary to achieve these goals is easily done. What pops out of it is a k' value that is needed to obtain a set of tire properties (lateral force and aligning moment stiffness) needed to meet such goals. Sometimes these goals are unobtainable because there are no such tires which can deliver the specifications.
For example, an equivalent BMW 5 Series on it's 'best' handling/feeling tires (Continentals) can NOT be made from a Cadillac CTS-V because the V8 engine plus it's transmission location can not deliver a k' of -0.1 Instead, it's k' of 0.2 penalizes the needed tire stiffnesses to produce the balanced car. Yes, you can utilize different front and rear tire sizes, but now we are into marketing, part numbers, wheel rims, tire rotation, aftermarket tire availibility, warranty and a few other things some car buyers, dealers (and some LAWYERS) will NOT tolerate.
Here's a simple example:
Lets say you drool over a Kleptomatic Level-III handling car that has nimble handling, great road feel, a wapping max lat and costs less than 70,000 denariuses (denarii ???).
You measure a few and here are it's metrics:
Steering Gain (g/100 deg SWA at 100 kph): 1.80
lateral acceleration response time (sec.) 0.28
Yaw Velocity Peak to Steady Ratio 1.05
[Same as a zeta of 0.69 ]
for k'= 0.2:
Front Cornering Compliance == 4.54 deg/g
Rear Cornering Compliance == 1.83 deg/g
[Understeer == 2.71 ] deg/g
Overall Steering Ratio == 11.80 deg/deg
This much understeer kills your max lat.
The low steer ratio makes for way too high of a steering gain at 250 kph.
Next is k' = 0.0
Front Cornering Compliance == 3.87
Rear Cornering Compliance == 2.01
[Understeer == 1.86 ]
Overall Steering Ratio == 14.40
This is do-able, but where will all that front compliance come from? Roll steer, soggy bushings, high effort steering feel, high caster ???
Then there is k' = -0.02
Front Cornering Compliance == 3.51
Rear Cornering Compliance == 2.21
[Understeer == 1.30 ]
Overall Steering Ratio == 16.82
That 17:1 ratio means its a dog in the parking lot (low speed gain).
The low understeer might make some lawyers nervous in light of the replacement baloney skins some clueless tire dealer will try out.
These low cornering compliances will require some stiff tires, possibly half tread, produce poor isolation from road bimps, be VERY expensive, and result in a gigantic steering gain at max speed. And, the tires can't make up the whole enchilada. You are gunna need some extra compliance(s) (roll steer) this is the Porch Glider solution. Not worth a crap at max lat so Happy Tails to you, Roy Rogers. How about the Lond Rova approach ? Cheewing gum mounted steering gear ?
So, what's in YOUR wallet ?