Would love to be able to practice things like this without the fear of running off a cliff or hitting another car...
I suppose I could take it out to the Autocross... other suggestions on improving driving skill?
You will want to explore the limits of your car (Heavy braking, braking with lock on, corner entry, middle, exit, low/high speed cornering characteristics, etc). The only way to responsibly do this is at a track, or find your self a HUGE and VACANT parking lot and set up practice corners with some cones (last resort)ccallana wrote: Tue Jul 30, 2024 4:45 pm What is the recommended way to learn how to properly drive a classic 911? I mean, I know how to drive a car - but with some of the dynamics of these cars, one can get in trouble... I almost did this last weekend... took 'er out on the twistys, came into sharp downhill left hander a bit too hot... I *think* if I had more experience I might have been able to drift my way through the corner, but I panic'd, let off the throttle, applied probably too much brake pedal... went skidding straight and ended up mere inches from dropping the front wheels into a ditch and potentially smashing the front end into a rock wall....
Would love to be able to practice things like this without the fear of running off a cliff or hitting another car...
I suppose I could take it out to the Autocross... other suggestions on improving driving skill?![]()
*you're* gladblueline wrote: Tue Jul 30, 2024 5:26 pm
Glad no damage because what you described often ends unfavorably.![]()
Big second on this. PCA driver's ed events are made for exactly this, and are hard to match outside a paid racing school. The other thing I'd suggest is reading up a bit. I was able to partially participate in Bob Bondurant's old driving school at Laguna Seca -- sat through all the training, but had very limited seat time since I was there as a tag-along with a college kid's budget (i.e. no budget). Before doing that, I bought and read (over and over) "Bob Bondurant on High Performance Driving" and I do think it helps to have the basics spelled out in black and white. A little book learn'n helps you 'get' what the instructor is telling you, at least it did for me. Of course, most Uber drivers can lap me on a track, so take my input on racing with a tiny little grain of salt.Stormy_Monday wrote: Tue Jul 30, 2024 6:20 pm PCA track day with an instructor that knows older 911's.