Does this make sense?
Is it even possible?
Sorry if this has already been asked, I don’t know what to search to find this
Okay, so you want to model a skateboard. Skateboards have wheels. Perhaps you should look into Wheel Collider, as this will most likely simplify a lot for you. This should most likely be your first attempt on making wheel physics.
If you want to do the physics yourself, you can. I am not a physics math expert but I can let you pick my brain for ideas and try stuff out. Below is my own approach on solving the problem.
So, I am not a skateboarder myself and I don’t know how forces are distributed when it comes to turning. But I can give you an example of how I understand wheels to work on cars (and mind you, this may be incorrect but I am trying my best here). The wheels on cars turn and rotate (or spin). The driver doesn’t “add a force to the center” or “rotate around the center” of the car when they want to accelerate or turn. The forces are applied at the wheels.
Imagine a car is driving forward and then turns. No acceleration is applied during this example.
As the wheels turn, their axle will no longer be in line with the cars momentum vector (pink). As a result, the wheels will experience resistance forces (red) opposite to the momentum vector and experience greater grip depending on the angle between the momentum and the axle. The wheel itself has angular momentum (around the axle, blue arrow shows wheel top direction) and is in contact with the surface.
Forces are applied to the rigidbody, at the wheels,
I made an example which model a car with wheels in 2D. Each wheel act on the rigidbody. Turning the wheels implicitly rotates the car due to the traction forces (I dont know if it’s called traction usually, but that’s what I call it - grip, whatever).