Re: TPMS for Winter Tyres
Posted: Wed May 20, 2015 10:27 pm
That must've been rather scary
Yes auto boxes and skidding is a totally different ball game
Yes auto boxes and skidding is a totally different ball game
Probably the Worlds greatest Polo resource
https://www.uk-polos.net/
I like to blame the Rolling Stones.alexperkins wrote:That must've been rather scary
Yes auto boxes and skidding is a totally different ball game
In my 20's (so 20 years ago!), I used to rally a Vauxhall Nova at club level. Whilst I'm no Juha Kankunnen, it was a fantastic way to learn car control. The club 'old hands' were also very free with advice, and in a front wheel drive car the technique to correct a back wheel 'skid' was to keep your foot in! The back end can't go anywhere if it's being pulled was the logic. Didn't always work though!perarduapropatria wrote:I've some evasive driving experience, but nothing prepared me for that.alexperkins wrote:I bet it did!
I had a similar experience in my Edition 30 - had some copy cat continental sports on it and they handled like they were made of pencil erasers.
Changed all four to Goodyear Eagle F1 asymmetric 2s and it was like night and day - good tyres those.
The problem was that I corrected the skid and tapped the brake, forgetting it was a rear wheel auto box. Tapping the brake shifted the weight forward and away from the driven wheels, making the back lighter and easier to spin.
Rear skid in an auto? Foot off gas, let the gearbox do the braking. Lesson learnt.
That's why on a front wheel drive car you should always have the best tyres on the rear, because a rear skid is far harder to control, in a fwd car, than a front skid.