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| Tracking / Autocross / HPDE / Drifting What these cars were built for! |
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#29 |
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Was this with Trackmasters? I was at Laguna Seca yesterday and Doug mentioned a car spinning and the driver didn't go two feet in. Ended up rolling backwards into another car. This was at their last Sonoma event.
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#30 |
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Yup. Thankfully that wasn't me. The incident he mentioned was between an F360 and a Cayman. Lots of carnage that day. :-(
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#31 |
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My thoughts,....wasn't this car set up to oversteer by design for slow speed fun on skinny tires?...don't know where but I remember reading someone going bigger on front sway bar and actual removing rear sway bar to settle this car down to prevent snap oversteer when he was running stickier wider tires.......thoughts anyone?
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#32 | |
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#33 | |
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Your spin was a bit odd. I definitely think being in 3rd gear along with the cold tires contributed to the spin. As somebody else mentioned, there is a slight dip at the apex that helps the car take a set on exit. Once you feel the car set, you can get on the throttle and release the wheel. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to k33n3r For This Useful Post: | orthojoe (06-01-2013) |
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#34 |
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But at speed and at the limit with skinny tires,...not sure your going to have time to correct....its going to happen very quickly......just my thoughts.....great video btw.
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Does anyone think the spin was correctable in the right hands?
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#36 | |
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The next time you are on the track you will be expecting this and waiting for the rear to step out in every turn, at any moment. When the rear steps out again you will correct instantly with slightly reduced throttle and will keep the yaw smaller. If the yaw becomes to big, as it did here, or in the rain, you will release the steering wheel and let it spin through your hands to correct faster/easier with slightly reduced throttle and then recover. This is what I tell myself, I hope it works. Last edited by track junkie; 06-01-2013 at 03:37 PM. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to track junkie For This Useful Post: | orthojoe (06-01-2013) |
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#37 | |
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Am I understanding you correctly that when the rear has stepped out too far, I should still keep light pressure on the throttle, discontinue actively countersteering, and release the wheel? This is the discussion I was hoping for. Thanks!
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#38 |
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I think you would have had a better chance stopping the spin by not lifting off the throttle when the back end started to step out. We learned that on the first day at Bondurant. You may have corrected a bit late, but its hard to tell from the video. After a ton of seat time, you'll be able to correct a bit sooner by the "feel" of the car about to oversteer.
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#39 | |
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totally agree that more seat time is need to get a 'feel' for the car.
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Last edited by orthojoe; 06-01-2013 at 05:43 PM. |
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#40 |
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EDIT: so that might have sounded dumb. Yes, of course, if you are going into a full spin, you want 'both feet in' and you are off the throttle. What I'm trying to say is that letting off the throttle (while countersteering) when you are in an oversteer situation will tuck your back end back in quicker and get you under control sooner than keeping on the throttle, which will keep your momentum going in the right direction while still correcting....?
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Last edited by orthojoe; 06-01-2013 at 05:56 PM. |
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#41 | |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to smbstyle For This Useful Post: | orthojoe (06-01-2013) |
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#42 | |
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No, that is not correct. Letting off the throttle will not bring the back end in quicker; you need to apply light throttle to control the oversteer when the back end steps out. They sat us in the chalk room for an hour and explained the physics behind it, and applying the throttle transferred the weight back to the rear tires, giving it a larger footprint and allowing for more grip. Of couse thats not exactly how they put it, but the general concept. But it works, first hand experience. Not only at the school, but in my SCCA Miata race car at Sebring that saved my ass several times. Here's a smaller slide in Turn 5 at Sebring that many people will loop it or end up in the grass, but you can hear in this video how I'm staying on the throttle while the back end is rotating out and it brings it back in, along with countersteer: [ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uez_v1C7dCQ&list=UUI7_3qVwegS7kgSt8P_D3Yw& index=11"]Getting loose in turn 5 at Sebring - YouTube[/ame] |
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| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to smbstyle For This Useful Post: | jonnyozero3 (06-02-2013), orthojoe (06-01-2013) |
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