PeterO said:
Not sure why you are using R + w/2 and r - w/2??
Here is a crude diagram I've drawn in paint since I have no scanner. This is what I've got so far basically:
[PLAIN]http://img607.imageshack.us/img607/4168/diagramd.jpg
So this is a representation of the curve in the track. The radius goes from the axis to the middle of the track. That is the red line. Now the yellow line is the line which goes all the way too the far edge of the track (where the cyclest would come into the turn). This is 1/2 of 'w' width + the original radius. The cyclist would then come to the very mid point of the curve which has the length of the green line. This would be original radius - 1/2 of the 'w' width.
Now this can be shown by extending the where back some to a point such that it is now the axis of the cyclist instead of the axis of the centre of the track. This is show with the purple line (just the extension I didn't want to make it all sloppy and draw lines over lines). So the curve would go from new centre point out to the far edge of the track, to the inside of the middle of track, and then back out to the outside of the track.
From that I've obtained that if I choose a point which is at 45
o to the 'origin' on the far edge of the track that it will be equal to rc-w/2+'a' ('a' is the value of how far back the new axis goes) and this would give the effective radius. (where the cyclist will travel) The curve of this will differ from the original curve (necessarily so or the cyclist could just stay in the middle and go thru the track just as fast right?)
I also obtain that thru the Pythagorean theorem that effective radius = √(y
2+x
2) (where y and x are the co-ordinate values of the point on the edge of the graph I've chosen) I can rewrite this in terms of 'a' and then my head hurt and that's when I came here :D
I wish I could scan the paper I worked on it'd be much easier to show the work considering the diagrams are somewhat necessary.
I'll try to rework it out again and post back.