Thread Starter
#81
Got to my first event in a couple months this past weekend.
Heavy rain most of the week leading up to the event. I'd heard the term "green track" before but never experienced it for myself. Despite hearing from other drivers that the track was pretty slippery, I went and looped it, putting all 4 wheels off the track, about 1/3 of the way through my first run.
At this location, going 4 off once gets you a warning, and twice gets you done for the day. My next few runs were slow, though I did pick up some speed in the afternoon session. Never really got my confidence back, and my best clean run was 3.5 seconds behind the faster FiST driver.
Talking with a few current & former FiST drivers, I think I got some insight into the torque vectoring / e-diff thing. Their experience was that it doesn't really do much if you back off the throttle as soon as a wheel starts spinning. If you let the wheelspin continue, that's when it applies the brake enough to vector some torque over to the other wheel. Will have to experiment with that some more.
Heavy rain most of the week leading up to the event. I'd heard the term "green track" before but never experienced it for myself. Despite hearing from other drivers that the track was pretty slippery, I went and looped it, putting all 4 wheels off the track, about 1/3 of the way through my first run.
At this location, going 4 off once gets you a warning, and twice gets you done for the day. My next few runs were slow, though I did pick up some speed in the afternoon session. Never really got my confidence back, and my best clean run was 3.5 seconds behind the faster FiST driver.
Talking with a few current & former FiST drivers, I think I got some insight into the torque vectoring / e-diff thing. Their experience was that it doesn't really do much if you back off the throttle as soon as a wheel starts spinning. If you let the wheelspin continue, that's when it applies the brake enough to vector some torque over to the other wheel. Will have to experiment with that some more.