JHamm:
The basic idea is fine, but either you did not get it quite right or are missing something...
...when you say "greatest force you can apply without motion"...did you mean motion of the car with the emergency break on? in other words, slippage of all 4 tires at the same time?...
...that would make sense, but that is going to be a very very large force if you expect all four rubber tires to sliip...
...and if you were thinking of letting the car get into motion by letting the tires rotate..then, this experiment is no good...you would need to know the friction in the tires bearings, instead.
blanco:
JHamm's idea is great, but you need to reduce the friction coefficient for an easily do-able exercise
Just put the car's 4 tires on top of something that has a small and knwon friction coefficient...
for example, get 8 pieces of 2x4's or 2x6's, say, a couple of feet long...
park the car in a place where you can work. Put the emergency brake on
raise one tire at a time and put two pieces of wood under it, one on top of the other one (not side by side)
to ensure that the friction of coefficient is large between the ground (garage floor?) and the first (bottom) piece of wood, put
anti-slipery mat or 2-sided tape or something
assuming firction coefficient between tire and top piece of wood is larger than in between the two pieces of wood ( should be ) ...the interface between the pieces of wood would be the weakest link...
get a spring of known constant coefficient or a strong enough dynanometer and a few friends plus one...all but one pull on the car through the dynometer and one of you keep an eye on the reading...the maximum number before the car move is your starting number for your calculations
...if friction is too large...you can use other materials instead of bare wood...
polished metal plates
laminate flooring
thick glass
...anything with known friction coefficient...or if it is not know...you can always conduct a preliminary experiment to determine the friction coefficient of whatever you are using.
it firction force with the car is too large and need to use a motor ...I guess you need to make a current (amperes) reading and calculate torque and then force depending on pulley's radius, etc.does all this sound reasonable?