I found something quite interesting today. The generally accepted answer of "what do you do in an oversteer situation" is "countersteer" and when asked "cadence braking or foot on the floor?" most people would answer "cadence".
This Israel (I think) advanced driving school begs to differ:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v ... 9Rjpk&feature=related
The gist of this is, slamming on the brakes when the back comes out is safer on the road than attempting to countersteer. There's also some good stuff there on understeer and tyre pressures.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v ... p;feature=player_embedded
This is quite an interesting counter-point to the "cadence braking is better" stance taken by most 'experts' over here. Maslulim teaches that locking up = stopping quicker. Obviously ABS is better as you can steer to avoid the hazard, but that's not the point they're making. Again, there's tyre pressure stuff and an interesting point on "brake hard means BRAKE HARD!" too.
Give it a watch and offer your opinions, the conclusion I've taken from it is that countersteering is only for the track... I may give this a go in LFS later...
This Israel (I think) advanced driving school begs to differ:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v ... 9Rjpk&feature=related
The gist of this is, slamming on the brakes when the back comes out is safer on the road than attempting to countersteer. There's also some good stuff there on understeer and tyre pressures.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v ... p;feature=player_embedded
This is quite an interesting counter-point to the "cadence braking is better" stance taken by most 'experts' over here. Maslulim teaches that locking up = stopping quicker. Obviously ABS is better as you can steer to avoid the hazard, but that's not the point they're making. Again, there's tyre pressure stuff and an interesting point on "brake hard means BRAKE HARD!" too.
Give it a watch and offer your opinions, the conclusion I've taken from it is that countersteering is only for the track... I may give this a go in LFS later...