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Good questions TM

 

It's possible if the right rear tyre did not hit the dirt that snap oversteer slide would not occur.


I agree with you about the possibility of taking another line. That driver may not be familiar with that corner ( easy to do on the ring with so mannyl corners to remember over a long " public " track ). The driver may have turned in too early and at too high a  speed he was carrying into the corner and thus ran wide ( viewed the clip on my iPhone without slow motion and thus hard to tell ). You amongst us purists ( Ben and Bim to name a few ) who have experienced track time would know the importance of familiarisation laps on a track to work out your braking and turn in points ( not to turn in too early or too late ) mindful of your car's handling characteristics , understeer , oversteer or neutral.

The Porsche by being rear engined and having that rear weight bias would certainly make the slide worse and more abrupt . Rear engines Porsches ( especially the older ones without the multi link rear suspension ) can bite you hard if you get it wrong but also immensely satisfying to drive on a track with great direct and communicative steering ( especially the older non electric motor power assisted ones ) and fine satisfying adjustment of your racing line by subtle
Throttle control ( a slight lift of loud pedal will tighten your line ).

We will wait for Ben , Bim and others to chime in.

Cheers, dreamer
This message has been edited by dreamer8 on 2012-12-06 21:30:11 This message has been edited by dreamer8 on 2012-12-06 21:43:58

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