The purpose of this page is to provide information and opinion about various cars that are popular for motor sports and running winding roads. The cars are review from the a performance perspective.
Enzo Ferrari describing the technique used by his driver Tazio Nuvolari. Tazio is one of the many driver that were doing 4 wheel drifts, considered the fastest corning technique until modern tires and aerodynamics reduced the slip angle drifting to near invisible levels.
"At the first bend, I had the clear sensation that Tazio had taken it
badly and that we would end up in the ditch; I felt myself stiffen as I waited
for the crunch. Instead, we found ourselves on the next straight with the
car in a perfect position. I looked at him, his rugged face was calm, just
as it always was, and certainly not the face of someone who had just escaped
a hair-raising spin. I had the same sensation at the second bend. By the fourth
or fifth bend I began to understand; in the meantime, I had noticed that
through the entire bend Tazio did not lift his foot from the accelerator,
and that, in fact, it was flat on the floor. As bend followed bend, I discovered
his secret. Nuvolari entered the bend somewhat earlier than my driver's instinct
would have told me to. But he went into the bend in an unusual way: with
one movement he aimed the nose of the car at the inside edge, just where
the curve itself started. His foot was flat down, and he had obviously changed
down to the right gear before going through this fearsome rigmarole. In this
way he put the car into a four-wheel drift, making the most of the thrust
of the centrifugal force and keeping it on the road with the traction of
the driving wheels. Throughout the bend the car shaved the inside edge, and
when the bend turned into the straight the car was in the normal position
for accelerating down it, with no need for any corrections." [1]
Enzo Ferrari
1. from
http://www.ddavid.com/formula1/index.htm
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