Porsche Club AutoX - Saturday, Aug 30th |
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Patrick
Newbie Joined: 19 April 2008 Location: Vancouver Status: Offline Points: 5 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 02 September 2014 at 3:58pm | |
Wow, lots there to take in! Let me come back tonight after I've had a chance to digest it all. Thanks Al.
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karnak
Senior Member Joined: 28 August 2009 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 349 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 02 September 2014 at 4:36pm | |
Here are a couple more links to some runs but please turn down your speakers...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e9awv5Ww2lc https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Le1Fjb-ofQ |
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AllanJ
Senior Member Joined: 28 July 2010 Status: Offline Points: 254 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 02 September 2014 at 5:09pm | |
No problem.
This is all general "performance" driving knowledge that I've been mentioning to Gary over time but it still takes a while for everything to gel in your head. It took me a while! One more example from when I was there last time: Rich drove the 914 and felt it understeered. He couldn't get it to turn in without plowing. Gary felt the same way. I was a bit surprised because I thought the car was fairly balanced. So I adjusted the shocks to move the balance a bit so the front had more grip (and the rear had less grip). When I drove the car at lunch, the car sucked! It was oversteering horribly in linked turns. So I undid my change and put the car back the way it was. What was going on between me and Rich? Rich asked me how I got the car to turn in nicely when all he dealt with was understeer. I'll go back to my previous post about weight transfer and grip levels front to rear. When Rich drives the car, he has a tendency to get all the braking done in a straight line before the turn, and then gets off the brakes quite quickly and is back on the gas. So what's going to happen is he enters the turn either neutral weight or even rear-weighted. What are the tires doing? You will have less than desired grip up front and with a light front end (on a mid-engined car), you will often get understeer. Not much weight on those front tires and it's hard to turn. What do I do? I "trailbrake" into the turn. I'll dive into a turn, braking fairly late. By the time I'm ready to begin my turn, I'm still going too fast to make the turn without sliding, so I need to keep applying the brakes. Applying the brakes moves the weight to the front, giving more pressure to the front tires, giving them more grip. No understeer for me and the car is rotating just fine! But as I increase the steering input, I'm taking away from my overall grip levels because the car needs tire grip to turn. So as I feed in more steering, I'm REDUCING the brake level. Simplified summary of tire grip distribution: Braking in a straight line: 100% Turning: 0% Starting turn with 10% steering 90% braking Getting into turn with 25% steering 75% braking Mid-turn 50% steering: 50% braking Max turn angle 100% 0% braking - completely off brakes now because I'm using all my potential grip to turn Time to accelerate out of the turn, reverse of the above Unwind wheel to 90% turn level: 10% gas Unwind wheel to 50% steering 50% gas Out of turn at 0% steering input 100% gas That kind of thing. For Gary's car, I'd rather it be set up the way I drive it because I believe (and so does every car manufacturer that sells cars in countries that have lawyers) an understeering car is safer. You don't want to make an emergency maneuver on the highway to avoid some debris and end up in a spin! Also, if you have to make an emergency turn to avoid something, chances are you'll instinctively lift off the throttle or get on the brakes and then turn the wheel - an understeering car responds perfectly to this situation. One other thing: when I first autocrossed my GT3 I was understeering everywhere because I drove it wrong. I was overslowing for a turn and then back on the gas at the start of a turn, when I wanted to rotate the car. It's very hard to turn a 911 when only 1/3 of the overall weight is at the front and you are artificially making that be even less because you're on the gas at turn entry. So I'd be plowing through cones all the time. Race like crazy to the next turn - and mow down more cones. It was brutal. It wasn't until I understood weight transfer and how it affects grip levels that I finally drove the car better. Weight transfer is key. Understand how that works and how it affects grip levels and you're well on your way. Edited by AllanJ |
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AllanJ
Senior Member Joined: 28 July 2010 Status: Offline Points: 254 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 02 September 2014 at 5:13pm | |
Cool! My ears are bleeding and I feel sea-sick, but cool! |
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karnak
Senior Member Joined: 28 August 2009 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 349 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 02 September 2014 at 7:53pm | |
ya.. sorry about the noise. I promise I will work on that Rich was keenly interested in how I was driving and carefully watched what I was doing. when it was his turn, he performed maneuvers with the car I did not seem were do-able. by the end of the day, I had applied some bits here and there. he drove it well. the mid engine design car (Fieros, etc..), I believe can be set up well but the driver is indeed the biggest variable. we all need to get out there and apply what we know and be observant. we had old American muscle, all wheel drive, and even an old Volvo there, all swaying to those cones in their own ways. they all were impressive in their own ways. (and if you are still reading this and it does not sound like Bla, Bla, Bla.. then please consider coming to the next event. all these words can be boiled down to some simple things that will help anybody drive more soundly) it is fun stuff! |
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AllanJ
Senior Member Joined: 28 July 2010 Status: Offline Points: 254 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 02 September 2014 at 8:14pm | |
Rich is a great driver. He has great balance when it comes to drifting too. I suck by comparison. lol!
Indeed! The other key benefit is that the average speed of autocross is about 60km/h so the car control skills you learn here are directly applicable to city street driving. Skills you learn here can save your bacon! |
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Patrick
Newbie Joined: 19 April 2008 Location: Vancouver Status: Offline Points: 5 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 04 September 2014 at 1:27pm | |
...which is why the BCCC autocross a few weeks ago was rather invigorating when we were entering the stop box at 115 km/h! Al, you've gone over a ton of helpful stuff. Thanks so much. I often wish there was a way of having a sweeper set up at a track and then just do that one sweeper over and over and over again until it feels just right. The UBCSCC Autocross 101 which I've taken a couple of times sort of does that, but I'd love to find an abandoned parking lot somewhere out the middle of nowhere and just turn up there with a number of cones. I think that's what it'll take for all this information to actually sink in. Gary commented that Rich seems to plays tricks with his feet while driving the course. He uses his left foot to brake so as to reserve his right foot for GO duty. Is there some value to learning this technique, or is there a danger of over-complicating things? One thing I haven't mentioned during any of this discussion of my handling issues is the fact that I've never had the wheels properly aligned on my Formula at a shop. You may now wonder.. "What the heck!" Keep in mind that Colby and I did a rough alignment (to the best of our ability), but the reason why I didn't take it to a shop is that I wanted to finalize my choice of suspension components first. Among other things (ball joints/struts/shocks/zero-lash end links/sway bar poly bushings) I put lowering springs in, which are a heck of a lot better the factory springs, but as I've mentioned previously, I'm not 100% satisfied with them. Call me thifty/cheap/frugal, but I didn't want to be spending $100+ for alignment more times than necessary. Once I decide for sure what I want to stick with, I'll take the car to a shop and have everything set to specs. That just might improve the handling. Edited by Patrick |
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AllanJ
Senior Member Joined: 28 July 2010 Status: Offline Points: 254 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 04 September 2014 at 7:46pm | |
There is a way to have you do a sweeper over and over
again, but it'll cost you a lot of money to book the track. I do have about 20 cones.... Re: left foot braking: IMHO, don't bother. It's a skill that takes a long time to learn properly. Over the years of driving you have done, you have developed a super sensitive touch to your right foot when on the gas and brakes. Your left foot just goes in/out on the clutch. The time it takes to develop a sensitive left foot can be quite long. Some modern cars like mine (2004), don't respond well to left foot braking. You can go on the brakes for about a second or two before the fuel is cut off. So trying to use both pedals for any length of time won't work on a newer car. Kids who grow up racing carts learn left foot braking at a young age and can carry that skill to race cars and do extremely well. They will be faster than an old fart like me or you. So I don't know. I haven't bothered to learn it but thinking about it more, you may want to play with it if you're curious. Try it when you drive to work, but with nobody close behind you. lol! That pro autox guy I mentioned a while back said that if an experienced autox driver tried to learn left foot braking, expect to be slow for a full year before seeing any benefit. This is also with a much longer racing season that you are currently running now (and tons of practice on the street). Yes, getting alignments can be costly. Make some decisions and get it sorted, man! |
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Capt Fiero
Admin Group Founding Member Joined: 12 February 2007 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 4039 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 05 September 2014 at 1:49pm | |
I have kept quite in these autocross threads, but thought this to be slightly funny. If you grew up driving in the 60's/70's or just had older cars in the 80s you probably got experience with left foot braking when you came to a stop on a cold day. Fighting to keep that carb'ed car from stalling at stop lights. One foot slightly on the gas and left food modulating the brake as you came to a stop.
I also read on another autocross group of some of the problems with left foot braking, can be loss of engine vacuum. If your right foot never comes off the gas, especially in turbo cars, (yes even with boost check valves) you may not close the throttle enough for the engine to make enough vacuum to replenish the brake boosters vacuum supply. Then losing your brakes. IIRC a number of years ago there was a woman in a Corvette at the Boundary Bay area lost control of her car and lost braking, either went into the crowd or staging area, I can't completely remember the details. So just a few things to think about when it comes to left foot braking. |
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Capt Fiero
88 Fiero GT 5spd V6 Eight Fifty Seven GT V8 5spd. |
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Rich Sandor
Newbie Joined: 05 September 2014 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 2 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 05 September 2014 at 4:26pm | |
The hardest part for me was remembering to go back to normal braking when entering the stop box. Otherwise your left foot is committed to the brakes and there's no way to clutch in... = stall! It takes time to learn, for sure, and for ME, it is faster. However I have seen data for GT drivers in the same car, getting the same times with and without LFB.. however I'm not sure either was going as fast as humanly possible. The advantage is multiplied on a course with more corners (like autox) and not as noticeable on a course with few corners. However, I still think LFB has the potential to be faster. It's undeniably advantageous on older cars with big turbo lag.. I mostly wanted to weigh in because on the previous autocross I was bitching about Gary's 9146 understeering, but I didn't have the problem this time around. I noticed Al mention that perhaps I wasn't trail-braking.. the thing I realized is that I *was* trail-braking, but I was starting too late and carrying too much speed.. the car just wouldn't turn in. This time I was braking earlier and smoother and that let me carry more momentum into the corners. |
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Patrick
Newbie Joined: 19 April 2008 Location: Vancouver Status: Offline Points: 5 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 06 September 2014 at 12:40pm | |
Gary and I will keep our eyes open for a large abandoned paved area. I'm sure Colby would be delighted to suggest some locations as well, but Saskatchewan is a bit far to go for autocross practice.
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Patrick
Newbie Joined: 19 April 2008 Location: Vancouver Status: Offline Points: 5 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 06 September 2014 at 12:48pm | |
... Hey Rich, welcome to our little corner of the automotive universe. I don't recall seeing you doing the left foot braking when driving my Fiero during course setup/testing. Were you doing it, and I simply missed it, or is left foot braking something you only do in cars you're familar with? Edited by Patrick |
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Rich Sandor
Newbie Joined: 05 September 2014 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 2 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 06 September 2014 at 7:32pm | |
I was doing it in the Fiero. I LFB in any car that I'm
racing. (no need in street car..) And the newer cars respond quite well to it - as long as you're not trying to overlap too much throttle w/ gas. I LFB in the new corvettes and 911s and it doesn't upset the computers at all. |
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Patrick
Newbie Joined: 19 April 2008 Location: Vancouver Status: Offline Points: 5 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 07 September 2014 at 1:21pm | |
You're smooth Rich, very smooth... I didn't even notice. Of course, when you were piloting the Fiero while we were testing the course, it's no surprise that I wasn't staring into the driver's side footwell. I was more interested in where we were headed. I'm curious about trying out this left foot braking now. I'll see whether an old dog can learn a new trick.
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karnak
Senior Member Joined: 28 August 2009 Location: Canada Status: Offline Points: 349 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 08 September 2014 at 9:42pm | |
Welcome Rich!
as you can see, your run made the best video for quality, although not your fastest run by far, but does show a nice line and driving skill. i enjoyed watching the car go around. i really had a great time! |
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AllanJ
Senior Member Joined: 28 July 2010 Status: Offline Points: 254 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 20 September 2014 at 8:43pm | |
Hi Rich!
Thanks for jumping in. I was going from a combo of an obviously foggy memory when you drove a different time with me in the car and then some theories. I forget how long it takes to cut the fuel in my car if you are braking. Didn't seem that long when I tried it. I trailbrake a lot but then again, I'm also used to longer turns at a racetrack right now so my sense of timing is probably biased towards that, and not the shorter turns in autox. Patrick, keep us posted on what you do. I'm always curious. Cheers, Allan |
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