11-16-2009, 07:20 PM
bobt993 wrote:
I will say (and I'd be happy to hear other racers confirm) that the time I've spent in RTR DE has prepared me for racing offline or in adverse conditions and understanding what I can/can't do better than most of my racing competition. If it's a rain race (not DE but racing) you'll see the RTR guys doing very well indeed!
In a race last year at Summit Point I had passed a few cars on the main straight by going into the dirt at 100 mph at track left and then rejoining the track ahead of them. One of my competitors in my class was flabergasted "you are so lucky you didn't wreck!" It had nothing to do with luck -- but you have to know how to go off smoothly and how to come back on smoothly.
The more advanced techniques that Bob is talking about requires a different car setup entirely. All things being equal if the car is setup right you should be able to get to a constant speed and coast through a constant radius turn (sounds obvious right?). My 996 racecar and Bob's 993 racecar are setup in a way that would seem to oversteer very badly if you drove them like a normal Street/DE car.
In the end, DE is about safety first! Thats why we teach how we teach, it's not about ultimate speed.
Quote:What you are describing is correct driving by the driver's ed handbook. If you start racing and need to pick up the pace, then you will need to re-learn corner entry. It is a very difficult subject to explain and requires a high level of confidence in driver skill. A pro driver uses a very different entry and corner exit strategy, but I do not suggest attempting it without an advanced coach instructing you.I agree and disagree. The driver's ed curriculum is time tested (and mother approved). RTR DE is where many of us learned how to drive fast and the experience for many of us instructors was so profound that we feel a responsibility to give back and pass on that knowledge.
I will say (and I'd be happy to hear other racers confirm) that the time I've spent in RTR DE has prepared me for racing offline or in adverse conditions and understanding what I can/can't do better than most of my racing competition. If it's a rain race (not DE but racing) you'll see the RTR guys doing very well indeed!
In a race last year at Summit Point I had passed a few cars on the main straight by going into the dirt at 100 mph at track left and then rejoining the track ahead of them. One of my competitors in my class was flabergasted "you are so lucky you didn't wreck!" It had nothing to do with luck -- but you have to know how to go off smoothly and how to come back on smoothly.
The more advanced techniques that Bob is talking about requires a different car setup entirely. All things being equal if the car is setup right you should be able to get to a constant speed and coast through a constant radius turn (sounds obvious right?). My 996 racecar and Bob's 993 racecar are setup in a way that would seem to oversteer very badly if you drove them like a normal Street/DE car.
In the end, DE is about safety first! Thats why we teach how we teach, it's not about ultimate speed.