Originally posted by konata88:
I think ya'll are overthinking this

I know that there are a lot of factors and this can get technically very deep. On the other hand, I think most of you can generally take a look at a car/truck and think -- hmmm, that looks narrower than it probably should be for that height. Or, wow, that's car has a relatively wide track, must be handle curves pretty well.
Let's say I'm thinking about buying a Suzami model that kinda of looks like a Jeep. Aspect ratio looks about normal for cars. But then the COM is considerably higher. So, they want it to handle and be agile like cars but have the breakover similar to a Jeep. Ok, how did they compensate? Wider tires with rim offset outside the axle? Stiffer suspension? Anti-sway? KDSS like suspension? Nothing, hmmmm, maybe it's prone to being less stable?
Or if I'm looking at a 4Runner and trying to figure out is KDSS useful for highway driving or just a gimmick there -- it's really just for rock climbing despite the demo's. Is the 4Runner already compensating for height with a wider track and lower aspect ratio? Or might it actually provide good value and augment stability?
I'm not making purchase decisions. This is just scientific, conceptual curiosity on what is optimal and then what tradeoffs are made for different purposes and what other compensations are created?