Norm Peterson
corner barstool sitter
If you have the discipline to stay well within the lowest limit (your skill, car capabilities, road conditions) you won't ever use the computer. How do you think people like me (first licensed before you could buy any year Mustang) managed to get this far with the good driving record I've managed to establish and keep?I don't get why people bother turning off driving aids. I get people turn off aids in situational driving. Say, if you want to purposely throw the back end out. But normal driving, especially inclement weather, for all of humanity, keep the damn aids on. I don't care how good you think you are, you aren't better than a computer. Trust me.
Are you somehow implying that my '08, which does not have stability control technology and whose TC is utterly worthless, should not be driven on the public streets?
But obviously you've never been in a situation where some nanny or other managed to either intervene way too early or flat-out got it wrong. I have. Even ABS - probably the most mature nanny of the whole bunch - doesn't cope well with certain situations.
TC off is one way of remaining aware of how much or how little grip you have to work with, and experiencing a little tire spin starting from a full stop is your cue to adjust the rest of your driving accordingly. IOW, "feeling the tires", as was mentioned earlier. Guess what - you end up learning how to keep your driving below the threshhold where the others get interested. Better than inadvertently teaching yourself to drive up against those threshholds and finding a situation that's beyond what even the nannies can correct for.
Just because . . . I wasn't going to link these yet again, but you've talked me into it. No TC, no Advancetrak, no speed limits, and 100% WOT in 3rd gear at times. The driving just wasn't that tense.
Twitches in the wet can be caught without any electronic assistance whatsoever. Keep in mind that at a wet track day you'd be driving considerably harder than you would on the streets to get to it. Should be, that is.
In heavy rain and standing water where the hydroplaning potential is higher?
Somewhere I've got more, where much of the time I'm carrying on a conversation with an instructor sitting right seat. At one of my first track days actually.
Norm
Sponsored