sandbags in the boot?
cheers guys
Ben
Moderator: martauto

Defo industrial estate at early morning hours. Lots of space and nobody going about.Gibson wrote:industrial estate at 3 in the morning on a sunday is the cheapest and easiest but possibly not the greatest idea! i have driven old RWDs since i was seventeen never had a FWD car and all i did was take it real slow at first, u will learn it with time, dont worry


yep-this is always a winner.hammoj28 wrote:Defo industrial estate at early morning hours. Lots of space and nobody going about.Gibson wrote:industrial estate at 3 in the morning on a sunday is the cheapest and easiest but possibly not the greatest idea! i have driven old RWDs since i was seventeen never had a FWD car and all i did was take it real slow at first, u will learn it with time, dont worry






your mates talking tut, a tyre cant do its job if its standing still. the only time you should lock the brakes is when you're past the point of no return and you want to slide in a straight line to avoid something. a completely sideways car will go in a straight line if you're wheels are locked so bear that in mind when your heading for lamp-posts. i'd know dude, had my worst moment going up clay hill at oulton park in the wet in my formula ford, decided to try it flat out in qualy, aquaplaned, spun at silly mph, i stamped on the brakes at the right moment while the car was spinning and the car just continued to spin in a line about 1 ft away from the armcoe and onto the grass. had i tried to correct it i would have pendulum'd into the wallJon_Bmw wrote:I seem to remember being told that in the dry that locking up the brakes is as quick(well almost) as being on the point of locking up.


You're right, don't stamp on the brakes if you start to lose control but when a crash looks inevitable.fuzzy wrote:id say practicing in a large car park in the wet would be better as the car will slide easier and at slower speed than when dry. will give you a chance to get used to it first. i reckon that when it starts to go slamming on the brakes is the worst thing to do as it upsets the balance causing you to spin out of control.gental easing of allows the car to correct itself.

no! if your headed for a lamp-post or wall stamping on the brakes and locking up is the worst thing you can do! you'll have no steering and you'll be slowing down slower than with good controlled braking. locking the brakes is a good tactic when you've got a 'tank slapper' on and theres lots of obstacles on a particular side, say if there was a post on the left looming and the car is lunge-ing left and right, wait until it lunges right then lock the brakes and you'll spin nicely away from the post. i made the mistake of not doing this and trying to correct a very fast 'tank slapper' in my merc 190, it got more and more severe and BANG! banana'd it round a post, if i'd have stamped on the brakes at the right moment i would have got away with a spinMorat wrote:You're right, don't stamp on the brakes if you start to lose control but when a crash looks inevitable.fuzzy wrote:id say practicing in a large car park in the wet would be better as the car will slide easier and at slower speed than when dry. will give you a chance to get used to it first. i reckon that when it starts to go slamming on the brakes is the worst thing to do as it upsets the balance causing you to spin out of control.gental easing of allows the car to correct itself.








agreed on that. if youve passed the point of no return theres nothing to be lost by hammering on the brakes.Morat wrote:You're right, don't stamp on the brakes if you start to lose control but when a crash looks inevitable.fuzzy wrote:id say practicing in a large car park in the wet would be better as the car will slide easier and at slower speed than when dry. will give you a chance to get used to it first. i reckon that when it starts to go slamming on the brakes is the worst thing to do as it upsets the balance causing you to spin out of control.gental easing of allows the car to correct itself.