Quote:
Originally Posted by Jamestl
(Post 3121882)
Please don't apologize. You're using your time to provide advice and perspective, and that's helpful even if it's constructive criticism. I'm a fairly novice driver, and certainly have a lot to learn, hence my question on this as it's a foreign feeling for me.
On to your points.
- Circling in a tamer manner -- as mentioned, definitely have lots of room to improve as a novice, but certainly didn't feel tame in the driver's seat! The sound on the video recorder isn't great so you do have to turn it up a bit to hear well.
- Track out -- are there particular corners where you feel I didn't track out enough? There's one corner in particular where I'm definitely guilty and it's something I need to work on, and in general I'm probably a foot off the edge just because I'm not comfortable enough to be that close yet, but my instructors did not feel I'm far off the edge on the other corners. Not challenging your assertion, just want to better understand if there's any particular corner(s) you're referring to.
- Apex -- Again, specific corner commentary would be helpful.
- Stability control -- everything was off.
- Throttle steer -- got it. Your explanation makes perfect sense and that was the sensation going through that corner. Is that a term of art and when I say throttle steer everyone knows that it's different than steering with the throttle?
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Well, if you are just starting, dont be too hard on yourself. It feels like everything is super quick and that its a razor's edge but as you do it more, it will all slow down (your perception of things) and will feel quite calm.
Well, with the sound as high as it can go (both video and PC sound settings), I can hear a bit more and that helps a bit more. What I mean by hit or miss apex, for example at min 1:35, that berm is (looks at least) very flat and round, that is part of the track, and you are close to it, but not touching it. You should be over it, so you are easily 2-3 feet off the apex there, which is kind of big. For track outs, its hard to tell because you should have to steer towards the exit, or unwind the wheel completely mid corner to get to the exit of a corner, you get there naturally while trying to negotiate a corner. If you didnt, it means you could've gone faster thru the corner.
For now just worry about feeling what the car is doing and controlling it (it does what you want it to do). Proper car control is something I wish more people I see at the track had. Speed will come naturally after that.
For me, throttle steer and steering with the throttle is pretty much the same thing and is just generating more rotation by increasing the slip angle at the rear and is only possible in RWD (or AWD with rear bias) cars. Others might have different definitions of it, but it is not important what its called or what it is, really.
Last thing since you are starting. One thing I wished I knew when I started, most instructors want you to be a safe driver because you want to leave the track with a car, and they want to leave the track walking. As a rookie, there are many things that are taught to you so that you can be safer, but that dont really make you a faster driver. Its still ok to learn it all, but its not the be all / end all.