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| Tracking / Autocross / HPDE / Drifting What these cars were built for! |
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#43 | |
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#44 |
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There is nothing wrong with looking to improving your skills. The problem is how and where you use those skills. The public street is not a place to be racing. LFB is a skill used in racing, to cut times on lap times. It has no place whatsoever in public roads. It will not make you safer, it will not help avoid accidents. Thats why this debate got derailed so much, at least thats what I can see from reading most of the comments, as they are either aimed at autocrossing and time attack or aimed at you doing LFB on public streets.
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Icecreamtruk For This Useful Post: | strat61caster (10-13-2017) |
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#45 | |
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The latest SpeedSecrets podcast, they speak about practicing LFB on the street first. In fact, every instructor I've had has suggested starting to practice heel-toe and LFB on the street, in a controlled environment. Stand still traffic or approaching a red light are great places to begin practicing. I understand your sentiment, but there is a time a place that is safe to practice.
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#46 |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to ermax For This Useful Post: | alex.s (10-13-2017) |
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#47 | |
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A lot of us put a lot of thought into it, that's why you got so many responses so quickly many of which are strongly opinionated. (and in hindsight waaaaay waaaay waaay better than if you had posted in general, this would be a 12 page shitshow if you had put it there) Keep practicing LFB on the street, if you ever care about using it to go faster smoothness will be the key to success, not speed to the pedal. Never expect it to prevent an accident, it won't, you will via awareness of your surroundings and anticipation of what will happen up ahead, to your left, to your right, and behind you. And like others have said, if you slam on the brakes too quick you end up getting rear ended, the 86 is light and it stops quick, the F150 following you doesn't have a chance of stopping in time.
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| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to strat61caster For This Useful Post: | alex.s (10-13-2017), Icecreamtruk (10-13-2017) |
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#48 | |
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like you're saying, it's not just how quickly you get to brake. like you said being smooth is the focus when you're worrying about grip. we all know this, right? from what i've experienced with my own shitty feet -- which keep in mind have spent more time shifting gears than they have used a clutch-- i can more smoothly transition from full gas to full brake by using lfb. so that's the route i'm pursing. I think it was actually someone on this forum that suggest i learn to lfb after my last track day, the track was repaved and had no grip and i was struggling to get the front to turn in and not just continually understeer through the turn so actually a few people said try using lfb to overlap your transitions leaving the shorter braking zones and if you start getting understeer when you're wide-open in a turn to use a little bit of lfb instead of less throttle which sorta unbalances the rear... so i tried it in the videogames.... definitely works in the videogames... wide open starting to understeer, just a light drag on the brake and the front comes right around with the rear still nicely planted. so i decided i'd try to learn in the car. read a bunch and basically everyone says to start on the street in safe places, or as a kid in a kart. well im not a kid in a kart, so when i first started trying to LFB was approaching an empty intersection that i needed to stop at... pop it to neutral and lfb to a stop... no big deal... would find myself in the middle of nowhere practicing harder left-foot braking in neutral... then started integrating it into small slow-downs before turns where i wouldn't shift... it all feels natural after a bit. sometimes when i get bored i go cruise the local mountains (slow) and started using lfb there since if you're just cruising you can leave it in 2nd or 3rd the whole time. it feels natural to me now. so i find myself using my left foot more and more. which means i rarely find myself in these situations where i unexpectedly need to brake further than i thought i would. not a big deal... switch feet while braking (i've practiced this near threshold braking too-- again in the middle of nowhere) and use the clutch with the left foot and give the throttle a blip with the right heel and shift it. or put it in neutral if you want. not a big deal. i do it just fine. but i ran a half marathon last weekend and i noticed having to pick up my foot when moving over to the clutch was painful and annoying and noticed it would probably be easier to LFB in basically every way if the brake pedal was just a little wider... my left foot could stay further to the left and it wouldn't be such an annoying transition to move to the clutch, and there would also be plenty of room for transitioning which foot is using the brake... i donno. in my mind, now the brake and the throttle are two independent things again like a motorcycle. this makes more sense to me. i've overlapped inputs on bikes for years... it just makes sense to me. on a motorcycle you can't just slam to full brake. you would bottom out the forks and the front tire would go sliding and you would say goodbye to your ride... one way is a smooth application ... but that can take time. another way is to set the front down with a little front brake while you're still on the throttle, so when you do the transition it's already loaded and you don't slam into the endstops and throw your front wheel out the side. |
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#49 |
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@alex.s it sounds like you're following the same path many of us would follow, we all just went WTF in unison when you decided to focus on accident avoidance with lfb.
Keep on keeping on buddy |
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#50 |
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so... how about them wider pedals? anyone got one? can i just put on the automatic transmission version brake pedal? or do i have to move my clutch pedal to make room or something? i couldn't find any aftermarket pedals that were between the two sizes
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#51 | |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Icecreamtruk For This Useful Post: | alex.s (10-13-2017) |
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#53 | |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to CSG Mike For This Useful Post: | alex.s (10-13-2017) |
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#54 | |
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#55 |
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#56 |
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Senior Member
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yeah, also i typically don't talk very much in person. and look very generic. so people don't really notice me. i bought a can of motul from someone right next to you near the garages.
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| The Following User Says Thank You to alex.s For This Useful Post: | strat61caster (10-14-2017) |
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