Sliding to an extent can be good for a number of reasons. One is to induce an increased slip angle in the rear tyres, and will result in the lateral grip being higher provided that the tyre wants all that slip angle, and the other is to counteract anti-yaw moments and this understeer.
The easiest way to think about this is that the chair has to both move around the corner in an arc, and rotate however many degrees at the same time say 180* for a hairpin. These are separate events (although they affect each other). When you enter a corner the front wheel leads with a force (because you steer it in) and this starts to turn the rig faster and faster. By mid corner the rear tyre has caught up (it always does) and is producing the same amount of force as the rear then the rig is rotating at a constant speed. And then the pilot removes his steering input and the rear tyre is providing more force than the front so the rig decreases it's speed of rotation. This is all just a moment balance game. see:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moment_(physics)
So the phenomenon of understeer is the front tyre doing not enough work or the rear doing too much, which means the rig will not rotate quickly enough to sustain adequate slip angle on the tyres. And oversteer is the exact opposite.
I have yet to mention the sidecar wheel in all this. Simply put it will just act like a front or rear wheel depending on whether it is in front or behind the centre of gravity of the rig. If the wheel is right at the rear axle you should find that the vehicle has very little understeer on turn in but lots of it mid corner. As you move it forward this understeer decreases until the wheel is inline with the CoG. At this point if the tyre produces any lateral force it acts directly through the centre of gravity and as such cannot rotate the rig. So it effectively has no effect on oversteer or understeer of the rig but can still contribute fully to lateral accelerations.
Taking this a bit further, the sidecar wheel will now have too much slip angle mid corner. However there are no rules against steering the sidecar wheel on a bucket so you may as well link it up to steer a small percentage of the front wheel.
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