God, I just hope noone dies after reading this thread
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02-24-2009, 04:59 PM | #16 (permalink) |
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God, I just hope noone dies after reading this thread
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02-24-2009, 05:54 PM | #17 (permalink) |
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I don't understand, are you people kicking out the rear on public roads on purpose?
When I start to fishtail my natural reaction is to disengage the clutch and but not touch the brakes. You're saying this is incorrect? |
02-24-2009, 06:11 PM | #18 (permalink) | ||
A True Z Fanatic
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In high performance situations: When you press the gas you should be able to count from 1 to 5 at least in the process. Meaning the process of going from 0% to 100% throttle should take however long it takes you to say: one, two, three, four, five. When you press the brake you should be able to count from 3-6 in the process of going from 0% to 100% brake. Similarly with turning, you should try to avoid turning abruptly in either direction. If you turn abruptly it will unsettle the car and often cause you to understeer (plow). Turn-in should always be smooth and controlled. "But RCZ, when I watch anything from rally to timeattack to F1, the drivers are often flailing their hands around very abruptly! What gives!?" Their inputs may be fast and abrupt, but if you ever see a shot from OUTSIDE the car, the car is moving very very smoothly. That is what matters. The weight transfers must be smooth and the movement of the car must be smooth. You may have to flail your hands around like a maniac at times, more so when you are driving race cars than street cars. (Think Karting if anyone has ever done it. Turn 1 at my local kart track is a flat out full speed right hander that leads into a very tight right hairpin. Sometimes I may have to catch not 1, but 5 or 6 slides in just that one corner. Hands flail, but the kart follows a smooth path. Yes I have also 720'd straight through the tirewall on the outside of the corner, but we won't talk about that). Again, be smooth and you will be faster and safer than everyone else. Tying back to my original response; letting the clutch out/letting off the gas abruptly/braking = abrupt weight transfers = not good. The moment you lift off the gas it shifts the weight OFF the rear wheels and towards the fronts. I'm not going to get into the physics of friction and grip, but you can imagine that when there is less "weight" or force pushing down on the rear wheels, there is going to be less grip. Less grip = you're off the road. Lastly, I should add that this logic applies also when you have FULL grip. If you are taking a fast sweeping corner and you let off the gas abruptly or tap the brakes, it will take weight off the rear tires and therefore you will loose grip and you will spin. You may have heard about this, it is referred to as "lift throttle oversteer" It is one of the most common major mistakes that rookies make on the track. If anyone remembers the pictures of the 997 GT2 I put up a while back, the one that crashed...guess what happened...yeah. Having the weight at the rear of the porsche helps grip until you lift and lose grip, then it becomes a pendulum. Last edited by RCZ; 02-24-2009 at 06:53 PM. |
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02-24-2009, 07:39 PM | #19 (permalink) |
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I think it also needs to be defined whether a driver is in snow or asphalt. letting off the brake and turning into the skid is correct in snow. When I think of skidding, I think of Snow but I guess it all depends on where your driving.
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02-24-2009, 08:28 PM | #20 (permalink) |
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yea my main concern is that
los angeles doesnt have many rainy days but when they do the roads get really really slippery. i once accelerated on a straight road (w/ vdc on) after a light drizzle and the tail almost kicked out to the side. if i had vdc off it wouldnt have been a pretty picture im sure. So im just trying to get a little bit of knowledge of how you control RWD cars. oh and hey thanks RCZ and everyone else. im not 100% sure what you guys meant but im starting to get a picture of how to control it. |
02-24-2009, 10:03 PM | #21 (permalink) | |
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Mattkim, all it takes is one day on the track and you will understand every single last thing everyone has said on this thread. Much of it is hard to grasp until you experience it. Get either on the track with an instructor or do a High Performance Driving School. EDIT: Not every situation, mud is completely different, almost backwards... |
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02-24-2009, 10:12 PM | #22 (permalink) | |
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Safe Winter Driving
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02-24-2009, 10:18 PM | #23 (permalink) |
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BanningZ, that says "if your front wheels skid" that means understeer, thats not a slide. Thats the front of the car plowing through the turn...in that case then YES everything you said is right. A slide is usually the rear tires.
Car manufacturers make cars understeer from the factory because it is safer. It is safer because when people freak out they let off the gas and hit the brakes. That is the way to correct understeer, not oversteer. The top part talks about oversteer and thats right, you turn into the slide. Notice that Line doesnt say jump off the gas or hit the brakes. It makes a second point to use the brakes if you have ABS. Thats not because its good to hit the brakes, its because ABS can help you a LOT to slow the car down once youve done STEP 1 which is to correct the slide. Last edited by RCZ; 02-24-2009 at 10:24 PM. |
02-25-2009, 12:00 AM | #26 (permalink) | |
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Second, snow (if you have it) is a great time to practice controlling oversteer situations in a MUCH easier setting, using the same principles. Tons of fun, especially if you are rocking AWD. Third, weight transfer can be a bitch, don't lift in highspeed corners unless you are in formula D and your name is Tanner Foust.
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02-25-2009, 01:40 AM | #27 (permalink) |
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I'm confuse can we lose control just with normal driving (straight ,dry road ) or when go go fast on corners? What about going through gears fast straight line? You guys are scaring me is rwd that bad ?
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02-25-2009, 02:09 AM | #28 (permalink) |
Captin Canuck
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^^^ don't worry they are talking extreems. Cars have been RWD for years old ladies can drive them. Go out and have a little fun with it you will find the limt you get comfortable with. It is not like every turn you make your @ss end kicks out and you are in a life or death situation stariing at a cement wall or 100' cliff.
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Originally Posted by SAM@GTM Engine detonation is not normal and it should never never happen, and whoever told that need to do something else for living . Sam |
02-25-2009, 02:18 AM | #30 (permalink) |
Captin Canuck
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^^^ I let go of the stearing wheel and close my eyes. they say you go where you are looking so if you look nowhere you are safe. lol
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Originally Posted by SAM@GTM Engine detonation is not normal and it should never never happen, and whoever told that need to do something else for living . Sam |
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