On new years eve I don't have much better to do than make a post on this thread.Lol. If you're interested in this subject that fact works out for you. Lol. I have done a extensive search on why a car pulls on a crowned road and how caster effects this. Most sources of info state that having cross caster will not alter pull from a flat road to a crowned road but most do. It does not matter much what the article says because most of them are just repeating words from other ambiguous sources of information. One article I found said that cross caster would pull to the left on a un crowned road.
I actually did find one single article that states more than 'vehicle pull on a crowned road is caused by not enough cross caster'.

According to them it was just a element of camber that caster created. That's my own paraphrasing and I will post the link if I can find it again.
This all got me thinking. Prior to reading this article I as approaching the cause as the terrain was causing the vehicle to veer because of the skid steer effect with distance travelled by the 2 different front wheels. I don't think this theory would cause force to be placed on the steering wheel though. That would leave force acting on the wheels which in turn ,moved the steering wheel.
Now we have to get a foundation for steering geometry as it is in actual practice and not just words that are repeated in a guide that only plagiarizes previous guides that contain information that can not actually be observed in real life.
SAI or Steering Axis Inclination ; I will presume when defined, is the inclining of the axis of steering or the inclining of the rotation points of where the suspension pivots up and down. More simply put , if a straight line is drawn through the upper to the lower ball joint ,the line is not parallel to the wheel. When the wheels only path can go from perfectly right to perfectly left and vise versa, the wheels move into the ground raising the body of the car. So when it' stated that the weight of the car causes the steering wheel to go straight if turned ,this is completely true. This also adds stability because anything that causes the wheels to move from interaction with the road also has to lift the car as well.
lets add caster to this. For what I present here ,I'm only going to use the definition that caster adds camber on turns and that is it.Comparing a shopping cart wheel to a automobile wheel has so many differences that they are hardly analogies at all. The front of a shopping cart is steered by moving the body of the cart to move the wheel and not the wheel moving the body of the cart , the cart's wheel swivels perfectly vertically and the shopping cart
s wheel tracks the opposite way as well. Caster is defined as adding stability to a car like SAI by making the car body raise in the air. The problem with this definition is that one side of the car will go up while the other goes down and caster does not have a centering effect when the car is still with a tendency that I don't think can be explained with friction. This would imply that motion also caused the centering effect of caster.
As this post is long I'm going to leave it at that for now.Maybe I'll be able define why caster cancels out road crown later or maybe this post will help a reader to do it for me. :
