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Old 03-19-2015, 04:04 PM   #1
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I thought other would chime in but the car is probably fine. Under acceleration in a corner the front end is light causing an under steer. If you push in the clutch to shift, the car attitude shifts adding weight back to the front giving forward bite. The car start to have full grip again, turning sharper, you unwind the wheel a little. At that point leaving out the clutch, it can balances the car returning some under steer but still not as bad as accelerating in the lower gear. The way you hit the gas at that point can do a number of things several of which are not good depending on your driving ability and tires and radius of the turn.

If your pushing your tires the rear will brake loose and come around. Or the front will start to slip and as you turn to catch up and leave off the gas the front will bit hard and the rear will come around fast.
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Old 03-19-2015, 10:58 PM   #2
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Thanks for the input.

I understand fully the dynamics of lifting mid corner, and I am no where near to provoking the car into a hairy moment. It is a long bend with only a small amount to of steering lock that I particularly refer to .

Will change mounts as matter of course.
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Old 03-20-2015, 05:51 AM   #3
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Originally Posted by jsceash View Post
I thought other would chime in but the car is probably fine. Under acceleration in a corner the front end is light causing an under steer. If you push in the clutch to shift, the car attitude shifts adding weight back to the front giving forward bite.
+1. It happens because you lift your foot off the accelerator and push the clutch in. Weight on the front, the car will tighten up the turn (oversteer). When weight shifts towards the rear, the car will run wider (understeer). It all has to do with weight transfer. Same happens on my motorcycle at the race track. That's why I try to maintain a steady throttle through the middle of a turn, and never shift gears while turning hard.
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Old 03-20-2015, 12:01 PM   #4
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I think they call it a 'responsive chassis' and it's considered to be a desirable trait. I understand that it's not always wanted and wonder if adding a little rear toe-in might improve things.
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