Norm Peterson
corner barstool sitter
Light to moderate understeer shouldn't be a problem, just steer where you want to go.
Only when the understeer gets heavy and it feels like the front isn't responding very well (or about to slide). Here, one of the pieces of advice I've heard here from track day instructors/driving coaches is to actually unwind the steering a little to let the front tires get back down to lower slip angles - adding still more steering in will only drive the front tire slip angles up, maybe past the point of peak grip where it'll really want to keep plowing straight. I've never experienced understeer quite that heavy coming out of corners on the track (and nowhere near that heavy on the street), but I've been close enough a couple of times on track to get a glimpse of how it'd work.
Norm
Only when the understeer gets heavy and it feels like the front isn't responding very well (or about to slide). Here, one of the pieces of advice I've heard here from track day instructors/driving coaches is to actually unwind the steering a little to let the front tires get back down to lower slip angles - adding still more steering in will only drive the front tire slip angles up, maybe past the point of peak grip where it'll really want to keep plowing straight. I've never experienced understeer quite that heavy coming out of corners on the track (and nowhere near that heavy on the street), but I've been close enough a couple of times on track to get a glimpse of how it'd work.
Norm
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