
Opposite Lock
#1
Posted 05 September 2001 - 16:42
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#2
Posted 05 September 2001 - 16:46
#3
Posted 05 September 2001 - 16:55
imagine you are driving around a right hand bend. At the apex the car transfers into an oversteer condition: simply put the rear end slides out of the path of the front wheels. If no correction was made the car would spin off the track. To correct the oversteer condition the driver may apply opposite lock. This means you would turn the steering wheel left. So "opposite" comes form the fact that the driver steers the car the opposite way the track goes and "lock" refers to the steering rack [i.e the max number of revolutions the steering wheel can rotate is called "turns lock to lock"]
Hope this helps!!
CC
#4
Posted 05 September 2001 - 17:03
This maneuver is dramatic but does little in terms of over all quickness and is more commonly associated with a term called the "catch and save"... Unless, it is in fact a consistent part of the driver's form.
Several drivers routinely use opposite lock to throw the car through a specific section... IMO, Gilles Villeneuve and Ayrton Senna were classic opposite lock drivers... Of the current crop, JPM displays quite a bit of that flair as well.
If JPM was using opposite lock at the Indy 500, it must have been a maneuver to avoid something or to save the car, one would never employ opposite lock driving an oval where smoothness is the key to fastest.
#5
Posted 05 September 2001 - 17:06
Originally posted by rdrcr
...Several drivers routinely use opposite lock to throw the car through a specific section... IMO, Gilles Villeneuve and Ayrton Senna were classic opposite lock drivers... Of the current crop, JPM displays quite a bit of that flair as well.
Keke Rosberg also drove in this style. Some call it reckless, others flamboyant, I call it cool!
CC
#6
Posted 05 September 2001 - 17:22
If you have a chance to watch rally driving you'll see some excellent examples of "opposite lock". They're doing that constantly especially when they are not driving on asphalt but on gravel. The cars are seldom going straight on but most of the time a bit sideaways even on short straights. If you then watch their front wheels you'll notice the technique of steering to the opposite direction from where your car's nose is aimig. We Finns who are used to drive in snow- and ice-conditions are very familiar with that thing and it's quite funny.... perhaps not for the first time when you find yourself sliding but otherwise yes...
yours,
ever so biased MIKABEST
#7
Posted 05 September 2001 - 17:44
It is the best example of this type of driving... Just watch the WRC and that will tell you who the best in car control really is...
Not to suprising to find Finns at the front of that series either... as past chamipons include Tommi Makinen, and isn't the current champ Marcus Grönholm also a Finn?
Seems like a lot of really good drivers are coming out of that country... must be all of that opposite-lock driving in the snow as kids...
#8
Posted 05 September 2001 - 18:17
#10
Posted 06 September 2001 - 01:36
This is a huge file 69megs - its 5'14" long but the first 1'01" is useless. I wish the guy who made the vid chopped it off.
Anyway, http://www.softlab.e.....Vatanen).mpeg