dunebuggynut wrote:
bmoore wrote:
they do transfer weight forward, longer the arm the further you move your rear tires back

therfore moving more of your rear weight forward
But you aren't moving weight to the front, you made the lever 3 inches longer. The weight of the tires is still rear weight regardless of where you place them since they are unsprung weight. You are confusing leverage with sprung weight. Moving the tires to the rear only makes the frontend harder to lift, not heavier. If you weigh a buggy & then bolt a piece of flat aluminum to the lugs then bolt the wheels to that 1 foot back & re-weigh it the front/rear weights should not change by more than a couple pounds from the aluminum.
Actually you didn't make the leaver longer you moved the fulcrum back "X" inches. The weight bias is measured at the tire and the pivots are just that, pivots. Look at the bearing house as the fulcrum the further back the fulcrum moves away from the lift the harder it is to lift. The lift in this case is the front end. The leaver is torque.
Think of the bikes that hill climb race. Are their rear trailing arms 2 foot longer than stock, yes they are. Why? Instead of lifting, from the center of the rear wheel to center of the front wheel, 5 foot it's now lifting 7 foot, way harder to do.