- 118
- GT_Fanatic69
I love the attitude of new members around here.
Your car should always be in gear, and you should always be in the powerband when down shifting, provided you are doing it correctly. I see at no point you'd have to rev the engine back up at corner exit if you entered it correctly. I am fully familiar with both theory and application of driving technique, thank you very much. And I see no where in your link on rev matching where it discusses matching revs at the corner exit
I'm also quite curious where you get track time every weekend, and what car you are doing this with.
Imaginary car indeed.
Over breaking slows the car down more than usual hence it being called over breaking. When you slow the car down by over breaking, your engine revs will drop. Blipping the throttle on the up is what comes next to match the revs of the engine for appropriate gear selection. You heel and toe on the way down, rasing the engine revs for smoother and more fluent stopping power. Yes, if done correctly you should have the right revs for for the exit and not need to do what i am suggesting. But guess what, this may come as a shock, its not a perfect world.
You learn to rev match before heel toe because it will be used MUCH more frequently in every day driving, i.e coming to a red light but then it turns green and you need to go quickly. Heel toe is really only necessary on multiple high speed turns where you must brake through the turn and accelerate out. In most cases on a turn on the street you can just revmatch and then accelerate through. This does not mean it is not done in racing though.
Oh and the car i drive on my imaginary track days is only and imaginary VS Commodore. Imaginarily stripped and race ready (not super impressive but if it were real, i'd imagine it to be a balls to the wall fast car). I drive on the imaginary Eastern Creek circuit be it a track day, open day or if the burnout comp is on.
If i can't get track time i got to an imaginary skid-pan for fun. Not in my imaginary track car though as the diesil can cause imaginary problems to rubber lines and what not. Imagine that.
Anyway, way off topic and a few "because i say it, i am right" people are boring me.