How to Trail Brake

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  • Опубликовано: 28 июл 2024
  • An in-depth look at how to trail brake properly, a critical skill to have for anyone who is interested in high speed driving. Trail braking allows you to approach corners at high speed and still safely make it around the turn. The key to trail braking is to brake at the maximum pressure available, then gradually release this brake pressure as you begin to steer around the corner, often maintaining some brake pressure deep into the corner.
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Комментарии • 243

  • @jazbuh1794
    @jazbuh1794 5 лет назад +128

    Man I wish I had the cash to go here for a day... not that the price is unfair, just not in my budget. Great video, I didn't know this method had a name, been doing this in the snow for years.

  • @fartsonu2324
    @fartsonu2324 4 года назад +138

    im a 14 year old playing forza thank you this really helps

    • @matthewjackson2656
      @matthewjackson2656 2 года назад +14

      that wont work in forza, rally physic are shit in that game. better get WRC or Dirt rally

    • @mcwater3439
      @mcwater3439 2 года назад

      Yeah. I usually try other concepts like cadence or threshold braking on my steering wheel. I’ll have to try this

    • @tegarkusuma8008
      @tegarkusuma8008 2 года назад +1

      @@mcwater3439 is it gonna work on gran turismo, grid, or nfs?

    • @mcwater3439
      @mcwater3439 2 года назад

      @@tegarkusuma8008 I play forza so idek

    • @Quadriple.
      @Quadriple. 2 года назад

      wat

  • @dannyaverx6413
    @dannyaverx6413 5 лет назад +264

    ULTRA SUPER LATE BRAKING!!!

    • @bavarian995
      @bavarian995 5 лет назад +31

      Only works with a S15 though

  • @vasilis23456
    @vasilis23456 5 лет назад +222

    Ok I'll try this in my dad's suv next time I go for a drive.

    • @agift4u240
      @agift4u240 5 лет назад +24

      Don't flip the car :P

    • @Agent_Clark
      @Agent_Clark 5 лет назад +9

      Make sure to lower the tire pressure for better handling first

    • @djstatyk1540
      @djstatyk1540 5 лет назад +4

      @@Agent_Clark dick

    • @syanheart3178
      @syanheart3178 5 лет назад +2

      @@djstatyk1540 why? He's not wrong. Less pressure means more rubber in contact with the road. Just don't underinflate.

    • @affixx5058
      @affixx5058 5 лет назад +2

      LegitCyan he’s trying to getting him killed :P

  • @_JayRamsey_
    @_JayRamsey_ 5 лет назад +124

    The most impressive part is that he's driving with work boots.

    • @tacticalcustard5488
      @tacticalcustard5488 5 лет назад +13

      lol I wear steel toe every day and I've pulled off some wild shit with them on once you get used to it it's easy you just can't heel toe very easily

    • @danielhaynes1642
      @danielhaynes1642 4 года назад +5

      I wear work boots/snow boots daily and I live on 15 miles of dirt roads with lots of turns. It's what I'm use to doing, it's almost weird wearing shoes and driving aggressive. I also overbrake the first couple turns due to them being alot lighter

    • @KrustyKlown
      @KrustyKlown 4 года назад

      really, those boots!! ... driving shoes are narrow and don't have edges that can catch on each other... cause ya don't want to be stepping on your own feet.

    • @anomalyp8584
      @anomalyp8584 3 года назад

      Def can't do that in Italian cars.

  • @bencrosbie
    @bencrosbie 5 лет назад +90

    Id smack my face in the steering wheel if I use the brake with my left foot lol

    • @richardtickler8555
      @richardtickler8555 5 лет назад +11

      keep the heel on the floor and practice when youre slow and slowly get your left foot out of clutch mode

    • @stinkyfungus
      @stinkyfungus 5 лет назад +38

      Practice.
      Your left foot is dumb.
      It only knows the clutch.
      Make it smart, "teach" it the brake.
      Start in a an open parking lot.
      Then, on the street with no traffic.
      Then, in traffic.
      And finally drive your car all day to and from work resolved to ONLY left foot brake.
      And now your left foot is smarter.

    • @bencrosbie
      @bencrosbie 5 лет назад +3

      hahahaha thanks xD was about to pull the pipe from the booster lol

    • @stinkyfungus
      @stinkyfungus 5 лет назад +7

      @@bencrosbie
      First time i tried left foot braking in a parking lot, I ended up with a helluva bruise on my hips from the seatbelt (this was way back before shoulder belts were required by law or even very common) locked up the brakes on my little datsun 510 and about kissed the wind shield.
      Lol.

    • @jasoncarthes
      @jasoncarthes 4 года назад

      the heel on the floor is a good advice, what works for me is to allign the heel to the brake pedal and not the clutch it make it far easier and i guess it is the correct way to do it

  • @TobRacer
    @TobRacer 5 лет назад +20

    Really really useful technique in Simulation Racing as well. It's been years I drive on racing sims and I just started only this year to use this technique. It's definitely make you a lot faster. Best example of must trail brake is the first long right corner at Suzuka in Japan.
    Great video ! Very good explanation and practice

  • @natyrips
    @natyrips 5 лет назад +17

    Interesting. I've been sort-of doing this all along whenever driving downhill: I'd break harder on the straights to prevent the car from building up to much speed and slowly release the breaks when turning. And now I know it has a name.

  • @91plm
    @91plm 5 лет назад +20

    Hi thanks this helped me a lot during my first rally school lesson (in France at Monteils southern france)!

  • @moonsapling
    @moonsapling 5 лет назад +29

    It may sound strange but.... I go rallying with my 1999 subaru forester and i gotta say its not much different from an impreza. In fact i enjoyed it even more because it was something different. And at the end of the day it was running like it just came out of the factory.
    And with all of this i am trying to say that you can try rallying a Forester too (cheap and easy to maintain).
    Cheers!

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  5 лет назад +17

      Foresters are great! They definitely do it all and they are a lot of fun to drive. The Forester XT especially with the WRX engine is a great deal too, you can get your hands on them usually much cheaper in great condition than a WRX (at least here in the northeast US).

    • @moonsapling
      @moonsapling 5 лет назад +4

      @@Teamoneilrally I am from Europe though and not in a rich country thats for sure... Every car with turbo is expensive here... So mine is just the 125hp one BUT it has a dual range gearbox... Theres nothing better offroad than a low gear subaru... My forester is pretty stock, except the tires and the shield on the bottom. I daily it so i got to have some balance you know? :D
      Also i am thankful for your answer and i really enjoy your lessons!

    • @MrKushinator420
      @MrKushinator420 5 лет назад +3

      Old volvo 850's are a lot of fun too

  • @micahbose9006
    @micahbose9006 5 лет назад +1

    Love the videos. This was to the point and answered some of the questions I had. Shifting after braking makes so much sense. One day soon I will visit you guys. Keep up the great videos.

  • @DarkIzo
    @DarkIzo 5 лет назад +35

    1:58
    is that the folksong of the rallymen ?
    id love to hear the underlying beat to that

  • @gzablodski
    @gzablodski 4 года назад +1

    Great explanation of a confusing concept. Sensing and controlling the balance shifting as you turn is the key. Thank you very much!!!

  • @fredygump5578
    @fredygump5578 5 лет назад +16

    You learn this pretty quick driving on icy roads up north (hopefully??). :) When you're approaching a turn a little too fast, when you are threshhold braking and it's obvious you'll plow straight through the corner if you just try to stop....there's a chance you can save it by gradually lifting off the brake as you turn in. But it needs to be smooth...especially on snow/ice. Think braking force + turning force

    • @user-os8sq3uh4n
      @user-os8sq3uh4n 5 лет назад +2

      fredy gump reminds me of so many instances it has happened to me here. Proves that the unavoidable really is avoidable with experience.

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  5 лет назад +12

      Exactly right! That and looking optimistically into the turn where you want to go (not straight ahead at the snowbank and bracing for impact). It's amazing what your hand-eye coordination will do for you naturally if you can manage to keep your eyes on the prize.

    • @angrysocialjusticewarrior
      @angrysocialjusticewarrior 5 лет назад +3

      Don't listen to fredy grump, this is fake news full of alternative facts. Taking a turn safely in icy roads requires the drive to ram the gas all the way to the floor (ram it down as hard as you can, even if you have to lift your butt off from the seat and extend your whole body down onto the gas pedal), then jerk the steering wheel to whatever direction you want to go. This maneuver will initiate a power slide which is the universally accepted way of safely making turns on icy roads. This tactic is also safe for motorcycles and large semi trucks.

    • @triplthr
      @triplthr 5 лет назад

      @@Teamoneilrally i learned how effective that coordination is when i bought a street bike. very important to know how to do this on 2 and 4 wheels

  • @107_javidmuhammad3
    @107_javidmuhammad3 3 года назад

    You're amazing man, mega job, I saw so many articles but no one explained this clear 🔥🔥

  • @unionse7en
    @unionse7en 5 лет назад +3

    Key thoughts: 1)hard braking stage (straight)- because anything else costs time but also because initial weight transfer 2) gradual easing off of brake (turn) -...rebound resistance of shocks help maintain weight transfer for a short time while all of the tires friction circle can be returned to steering during turn in once brakes are full released.

  • @yordantomov3974
    @yordantomov3974 4 года назад +2

    Thank you. Is very helpful how to start speeding step by step.

  • @tre1739
    @tre1739 2 года назад

    This channel is awesome I just got into sim racing and I don't have really much info to go on,I live in Uruguay a Ford fiesta is about 13k so sim racing is what I can afford. Great info thanks a lot.

  • @yordantomov3974
    @yordantomov3974 3 года назад

    Thank you for your videos, they are realy helpful!

  • @ramonmartinezjr.5697
    @ramonmartinezjr.5697 5 лет назад

    Thanks so much for this instructional video. It was be very helpful if you guys put a brake light in the front of the car to help show from an outside perspective when you initiated braking. Like they did in the drift king videos.
    Once again thanks for bringing up these videos.

  • @captriskybiscuits8785
    @captriskybiscuits8785 5 лет назад

    This was awesome thank you for this!

  • @pduksa
    @pduksa 5 лет назад +2

    thank you for the tut.

  • @imjaquinoff2168
    @imjaquinoff2168 3 года назад +2

    Thanks, helped my lap times in gt sport

  • @highman7520
    @highman7520 4 года назад

    Thanks, taking notes for my daily drive to work

  • @mdd47
    @mdd47 4 года назад +1

    THANK YOU FOR THIS. I don't know how many people tell me you HAVE to blip throttle to rev match at all times. Before I even knew what rev matching was, 20 years ago, I was doing it with the brakes on a 90s Mazda pickup and it's totally instinctual and NOT something you ever have to think about.

    • @mdd47
      @mdd47 4 года назад

      Also, 90s mini-trucks are awesome for rally and auto-x

    • @confusedredditor1660
      @confusedredditor1660 Год назад

      certaintly is less important on gravel, which is a rather forgiving surface

  • @Joeytheknife905
    @Joeytheknife905 3 года назад

    Thank you Wyatt , thank you team O'Neil

  • @chengguo2190
    @chengguo2190 2 года назад

    Great video. Thank you

  • @greglaracuente4264
    @greglaracuente4264 Год назад

    It is very pleasant to do this with an AWD. I have shifted to the perfect angle on an apex easily. Well... it was a 4000lb E350 AWD Sedan, so it was very easy. Dangerous though. Stock brakes. Nice driving !!!!

  • @later_daze_4080
    @later_daze_4080 5 лет назад

    Holy hell that looks like a ton of fun!

  • @asdxyz
    @asdxyz 5 лет назад

    And this is a simply wrx! Good job

  • @LD9user
    @LD9user 5 лет назад +1

    This is a great how to video. Can you do some front wheel drive stuff?

  • @MountainSalsa
    @MountainSalsa 3 года назад

    Omg so much fun ty

  • @ajimxnesmile2793
    @ajimxnesmile2793 4 года назад

    Thank you!!!!

  • @fullspeedfly1370
    @fullspeedfly1370 3 года назад

    I have those exact same boots. I do not have any of your driving skills but I have the boots. It's a start.

  • @bigbaderek1978
    @bigbaderek1978 5 лет назад +1

    might help to explain what it does to the car that makes it work so well on corners

  • @soundslikeaplan841
    @soundslikeaplan841 5 лет назад +1

    GUYS PLEASE any tips for practicing left foot breaking!? I'm at a level where right foot Breaking is holding me back and I just can't seem to the the hang of left foot breaking on my own? Awesome videos as alway guys.

  • @johnomahoney7755
    @johnomahoney7755 4 года назад

    Nice thanks

  • @rx8matt
    @rx8matt 5 лет назад +34

    ... and I'm gone. 😂

  • @no-replies
    @no-replies 8 месяцев назад

    He's a great teacher! So basically you're controlling the weight transfer

  • @artifica0
    @artifica0 4 года назад

    The looks so fun

  • @p.c.h.6721
    @p.c.h.6721 4 года назад

    Awesome! 🤘

  • @rdone4932
    @rdone4932 4 года назад

    This makes me want a Subaru. Looks way more fun than in my work van

  • @toctoc9927
    @toctoc9927 5 лет назад +24

    You mentioned hard braking...is it to slow down the car quickly or to lock up the wheels to make the weight transfer easier? And what's the reason behind going off the brakes rather slowly? Great video!

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  5 лет назад +48

      You brake hard initially to slow the car down quickly, which also puts the weight on the front. Then you ease off the brakes slowly as you turn so that the weight stays on the front as you enter the corner (and also keeps decelerating somewhat as you enter the turn).

    • @toctoc9927
      @toctoc9927 5 лет назад +4

      Thanks a lot, makes sense!

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  5 лет назад +10

      Anytime!

    • @agift4u240
      @agift4u240 5 лет назад +6

      I think you guys should pin this comment, good explanation!

    • @charlsomonsupertechtips3859
      @charlsomonsupertechtips3859 5 лет назад +2

      Hmm I just naturally knew how to trail brake before I learned what it was a couple years ago 👌

  • @toninocars
    @toninocars 5 лет назад +4

    Cool video
    Boy racers on our streets are doing exactly the same , sometimes successful sometimes not :)

    • @jamestomlin7144
      @jamestomlin7144 5 лет назад

      CafeArtuk will be competing Ellen and mullah Julia Ella and mellow

  • @germancavallo8277
    @germancavallo8277 5 лет назад

    It looks really challenging...

  • @deanpapadopoulos3314
    @deanpapadopoulos3314 2 года назад

    Thank you. Does engine braking along with heavy foot braking, then trail braking, and finally acceleration work or is this formula counterproductive?

  • @beauchang4741
    @beauchang4741 4 года назад

    What's the offset on those wheels on the bug eye... I like that look

  • @levylovits
    @levylovits 3 года назад

    What would be the difference in trail braking for awd rwd and fwd

  • @kabob21
    @kabob21 6 месяцев назад

    So difficult to do this on track with a manual transmission car because during the hard braking portion you have to heel-toe rev-match your downshift and then be easing off the brakes into the turn before accelerating through the apex. I'm still working on making it a muscle memory so I'm not having to think about each step. Interesting that he's doing the shift in the middle of the turn on dirt though.

  • @rodmcnew
    @rodmcnew Год назад

    Awesome

  • @MrSaemichlaus
    @MrSaemichlaus 4 года назад

    Brake late into a turn with a clear runoff area and pump the brake to find your grip all the way to the apex. Do that lots of times and you'll smoothen out that pumping action to a continuous curve. Done.

  • @powerst33r
    @powerst33r 8 месяцев назад

    Can we do this for circuit driving too? Use LFB, downshift mid-corner and power out. No heel toe needed, less stress on engine too.
    Wonders how this will work in circuit driving, maybe forces are too big to do all these in mid-corner?

  • @Pythnn
    @Pythnn 4 года назад

    I've sometimes come into corners at slow speeds and slid the whole way through, and other times come in red hot and just sailed through no problems, is this what this is?

  • @Jettraha
    @Jettraha Год назад

    I’m from Alabama and new to fwd racing. I drive an Acura TL v6 on a dirt oval track, Im just wondering if I should trail brake through the corners?

  • @paul-yo5245
    @paul-yo5245 3 года назад

    I use this same technique
    But I throttle in same time I use the left foot braking for rotates the car in quick corners
    It’s trail braking too?

  • @banzai.drifto5272
    @banzai.drifto5272 5 лет назад +28

    If you use your right foot for breaking couldn’t it help you downshift via heeltoe?

    • @richardbossman9875
      @richardbossman9875 5 лет назад +20

      As he said, worry about getting around the corner FIRST then worry about getting back in the right gear. Makes sense especially for anyone new to trail braking AND heeltoe downshifting.

    • @BrandonKent136
      @BrandonKent136 5 лет назад +5

      the car is going to wanna die out when youre going super slow in 3rd

    • @drtone
      @drtone 5 лет назад +16

      whadda u mean by help. by slowing car down with engine compression. NOT! i know what u mean. yes, getting the downshift done before is traditional turn entry. he's saying this cause there's no reason to flipout if u cant get downshift done, do it when u comfortably can, no biggee, do it after, turn. In general, you shift when ever its appropriate, period. Even if its in a turn, u have to execute all shifts with skill to not upset the balance of car with those negative consequences. He fails to discuss why u trail brake or what is its benefits. Trail braking is necessary to move to the next level of driving, ie going faster and higher level of car control. its using the brakes to transfer weight forward on to the steering wheels to improve/optimize turn in while simultaneously stay longer on the gas, faster on the preceding straight. Noobs are taught to finish all braking in a straight line, because the downside of clumsy, poorly done trailing brakes or trailing throttle into a turn is oversteer spin. Racing schools don't want noobs crashing all their cars, and it is helpful to not overwhelm noob drivers with higher level riskier techniques until later. It is impossible to drive fast or elegantly on circuit or rally without this technique. Plus, its huge fun, and on dirt, sometimes the only way to satisfactorily get the vehicle even turned in without undesirable mild, to massive, to terminal understeer. the term : Left foot braking :generally alludes to using dabs of it to transfer weight forward to mitigate understeer, which is related to or a form of trail braking. He describes it in scenario of hard full threshold braking, which is typical on loose surfaces of rally, but can be doled out as needed on circuit, classically trail more into slower tighter turns, less on faster turns, and avoid on high speed turns(want to keep weight transferred rearward to prevent oversteer), which is all based on car control. Mario Andretti is famous for a quote when interviewed on why he was so fast, and he said something like: " Because the other drivers use the brakes to slow down, I use the brakes to go faster" he's basically alluding to trail braking, i believe.

    • @Agent_Clark
      @Agent_Clark 5 лет назад +3

      @@drtone thanks for the explanation i play a lot of sims with a wheel and pedals while im studying for my licence. knowing that what i learn in game has good similarities with real life, Its always handy to hear. Especially from someone who knows what they are talking about. Also yes i know sims have cosistent surfaces etc etc but its the only practical tool i have right now. Thanks for the "brakedown" on that.

    • @jaynjuguna
      @jaynjuguna 5 лет назад +2

      @@drtone first of all, what you said was quite informative and helpful, thank you... But I believe the question was aimed more towards braking with the right foot to bleep the throttle in heel-N-toe for a smoother downshift?

  • @sirsinnedalot9142
    @sirsinnedalot9142 Год назад

    When do you downshift in a trailbrake

  • @HLinHD
    @HLinHD 3 года назад

    I always thought it's better to shift before the corner instead of after so you can power out of it better. Is that wrong?

  • @BreadAndGatorade
    @BreadAndGatorade 5 лет назад +1

    I love trail braking decreasing radius exit ramps in my FWD. weeeeeeee

  • @SaiRam-nz9sy
    @SaiRam-nz9sy 3 года назад

    I'm going to do it with my 75 bhp FF hatch. Wish me luck.

  • @LloydLynx
    @LloydLynx 4 года назад +10

    This is a skill us gamers figure out on our own and not realize it's an actual skill.

    • @youraveragegamer8832
      @youraveragegamer8832 10 месяцев назад

      I figured it out while learning how to drive. At the beginning, when slowing down from a 55 mph road, I'd turn into another street and have to stay on the brakes to not miss the corner and make it through the corner. I also felt it was more stable to keep the car on the brakes since I can brake as needed. This was far before I learned to appreciate cars and racing, I just didn't know how to judge braking distance lmao. Didn't get back on the throttle immediately and I still tend to let off the brake abruptly

  • @Chris-ut5ih
    @Chris-ut5ih Месяц назад

    Are you kicking the brake as hard as you can at first or are you still trying to be smooth with the brake pressure?

  • @peterbett3076
    @peterbett3076 3 года назад

    I’ve done 250 laps of the nurburgring over the last 2 years in my cayman GT4 (known to be prone to understeer and would benefit from good trail braking technique) and I’ve never felt like I have the spare mental capacity to start practicing this on the circuit

    • @dylanocarroll6963
      @dylanocarroll6963 3 года назад +2

      Are you still trying to get round the track as fast as you possibly can whilst trying this? Because that would explain why. Mental capacity improves by making actions automatic so that they no longer need your full attention, you can't expect to hone that skill if you're operating near your maximum already. Slow it down, focus on the technique and not the lap, one corner at a time. You'll be slower for a while, until you're suddenly faster.

    • @peterbett3076
      @peterbett3076 3 года назад +1

      Dylan O'Carroll thanks Dylan, fair comment. I do occasionally drive a lap at 80% and always notice and register things I wouldn’t normally. Have you driven on the nurburgring yourself?

  • @peepeepoo3432
    @peepeepoo3432 5 лет назад +3

    I'm sure I'm missing something but I've never seen this type of footwork when approaching a tight corner, i mean if you're braking from such a high speed into a hairpin i'm used to seeing multiple downshifts with heel-toe rather than severe braking without changing gears and downshifting only after the corner is cleared. Why is this better?

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  5 лет назад +2

      We could do a whole video on this question (and we should) but basically there's no "right" answer. There is a time and place for both methods, but one response to your question would be: If you brake very late and aggressively, the speed is dropping fast enough that the RPM will match the gear you want without needing to heel/toe and blip the throttle etc. A secondary of that is: If you brake very late and aggressively, your attention will need to be 100% on feeling your brake pressure, grip and bumps and tire placement on the road, your steering angle, line into the corner, etc. One of our favorite videos for this is: ruclips.net/video/EWBOKD6fGu0/видео.html

  • @andersr9545
    @andersr9545 5 лет назад

    could someone explain to me how you keep the engine from stalling while braking hard without abs? is it even an issue?

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  5 лет назад +5

      It's only ever really an issue on very slippery roads (snow and ice). Even if you do manage to stall the engine on pavement or gravel, it'll bump start itself again when you release the brakes... But on ice there might not be enough grip on the road to turn the tires and force the engine to bump start.

  • @lifethug2472
    @lifethug2472 5 лет назад

    Cool

  • @paulstabin6233
    @paulstabin6233 5 лет назад

    I have been experimenting with this technique and the main challenge seems to be not scrubbing off too much speed.
    FYI this is on a '17 Civic SI.
    The car is rotating nicely, just often too slow coming out.
    Great video. Your advice appreciated. Also, will it help to disengage the stability control?
    I leave it on just for the occasional patch of loose gravel or rain-but not much of that in Scottsdale AZ... Thank you.

    • @RChero1010
      @RChero1010 5 лет назад +1

      I am far from experienced with high performance driving techniques, but I can still throw in my two cents. As far as not braking too much, that's one of the biggest things for me right now. When I autocross my 01 legacy (with an automatic), I don't have the power so I need to carry as much speed as possible into, through, and out of the corners. When I'm driving IRL, I find myself slowing down more than necessary, which is safe, but not as fast as possible. I really need a big open space to myself to experiment and build up my trust in both the car and the surface. I have a similar issue to you when I'm driving in racing sims with front wheel drive cars; I can get the car to rotate initially but it's very difficult to keep the car turning without loosing all of my speed. I don't want to say that I need to enter the corners faster, but I, too, feel like I'm missing something. Perhaps some suspension and alignment adjustments could make the car understeer less to begin with so you don't need to brake as much to maintain the turning? Seems like something that cannot be attained without lots of practice and guidance from instructors who know what they're doing.
      Also, my understanding of stability control is that it exists to reduce or eliminate "uncontrolled" sliding. When you get your car to rotate, the stability control is probably going to be stepping in and applying the brakes on its own accord to fight the slide and keep the direction of travel aligned with where the front wheels are pointing. Traction control fights wheel spin, stability control fights sliding. Give it a shot without stability control and feel it out; perhaps you will spin but electronic assists seldom assist in anything that isn't normal driving.

    • @tomassosaoconnor
      @tomassosaoconnor 5 лет назад

      Just turn off the stability control and the car should be more predictable

    • @triplthr
      @triplthr 5 лет назад

      @@RChero1010 teamoneil.com book a class. i really want to!

    • @HoloScope
      @HoloScope 5 месяцев назад

      I’ve done it successfully once while rushing a left turn on a yellow. Not an si just a regular 4 cyl non turbo, I was absolutely gone, its really sick if you can get it right.

  • @NeoGeo822
    @NeoGeo822 Год назад

    That sound of the engine god damn!

  • @MrKW420
    @MrKW420 5 лет назад

    I just wonder.. How do I get better at predicting when to start braking? So it's not too late, or not too early?

    • @bigbaderek1978
      @bigbaderek1978 5 лет назад +1

      repetition ...lock it up over and over on different surfaces to learn what you can do or if your at a track, flirt with a corner you can over shoot and not die on

  • @Limeayy
    @Limeayy 5 лет назад

    Does trail braking work in places that don't have gravel, dirt and so forth? Like ex: mountains lol

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  5 лет назад

      Yes you can trail brake almost any vehicle on any surface.

  • @MethodOverRide
    @MethodOverRide Год назад +1

    I thought that I read something a long time ago that you wanted to break hard into a corner then be off power when rotating in the corner. Something about being on power would reduce the rotation of the car because torque was being applied. Basically the principal of being slow in fast out. That getting the car pointed around straight as soon as possible to apply full throttle again was faster than going around the corner a little hotter, but later on full throttle.
    Is this simply not the case or is there some nuance here between Rally and sports car racing like F1/Rolex etc?

    • @youraveragegamer8832
      @youraveragegamer8832 10 месяцев назад +1

      Think about it like this. You want to utilize all of the traction available to you at pretty much all times. On straightaways this doesn't apply as much but you want to utilize as much as you can. Go over the edge and you can break traction (over or understeer). Do to physics, you want to be slowing down into the corner, the slowing of the vehicle shifts the weight forward and makes turning into the corner require less steering. Doing the same amount of steering as you normally would could lead to breaking traction. You trail off the brakes until the apex of the corner and then slowly apply more throttle, trying to stay at/near the limit of traction. Correct as needed; because of human error, you will probably eventually break traction in one way or another, just try your best to correct it when it does happen. At the apex, you get on the throttle to increase the speed you carry through the corner and maximize exit speed. Left foot braking makes this transition smooth, but if you drive a manual right foot braking may make sense if you are using the heel and toe technique. You cannot accelerate hard at the beginning of the apex because you will spin out, so you have to ease onto the gas. As you unwind the steering wheel, you apply more gas. Many people use the brake and throttle at the same time mid corner just to stabilize their vehicle for a moment. It is still slow in fast out, you just slow down while you are going toward the apex and go fast out of the apex

    • @MethodOverRide
      @MethodOverRide 10 месяцев назад

      @@youraveragegamer8832 I appreciate the information. 👍

  • @Yaroslav_Tselovanskyi
    @Yaroslav_Tselovanskyi 3 года назад

    So you break hard while in a gear without disengaging the clutch?

  • @VinnetouCZE
    @VinnetouCZE 5 лет назад

    is it possible to do with FWD? will i get oversteer from FWD?

  • @Falconsgang8988
    @Falconsgang8988 4 года назад

    I use that for everyday driving I just thought that's how you should do it for a smoother turn lol

  • @konholio2
    @konholio2 5 лет назад +4

    I find that trail breaking is somewhat impossible in cars that are front heavy like Civic 5 hatch. As soon as I turn while breaking (or off the gas), the car starts to oversteer. Should I consider my suspension setup as incorrect or trail breaking is not a technique you could implement everywhere?

    • @ArchOfficial
      @ArchOfficial 5 лет назад +3

      That's an intended feature of FWD cars, more or less. Play around with it in an empty parking lot, and try out left foot braking to overlay a bit of throttle. Before you look at the car setup, look at the thing controlling the car.

    • @ianholmquist8492
      @ianholmquist8492 5 лет назад +5

      As he said, it is a universal technique. It's the driver, not the car's fault.

    • @ArchOfficial
      @ArchOfficial 5 лет назад +3

      @@ianholmquist8492 Although I will add, some cars are more prone to over-rotation, so you need to correct it as the driver. Some more modern cars especially won't be eager to rotate. And of course, you don't need to *always* trailbrake. Cars are usually best balanced pedal to the metal, so in very fast corners, you might not trailbrake at all, or very little.

    • @ianholmquist8492
      @ianholmquist8492 5 лет назад

      @@ArchOfficial for sure, although greatly depending on grip conditions, etc. As our man Wyatt said.

    • @richardbossman9875
      @richardbossman9875 5 лет назад +5

      The great thing about fwd is a bit of throttle timed right will bring the rear under control ( unless you have really over rotated ). I found correcting lift off oversteer with the gas pedal is easier and carries more speed through corners than simply steering into it in most situations I've encountered.

  • @tigrangrigoryan3587
    @tigrangrigoryan3587 5 лет назад

    How do you (or anyone) feel about applying throttle JUST after passing the apex marker (on a turbo car). Does this get you better track time/better track out?

    • @ArchOfficial
      @ArchOfficial 5 лет назад +1

      The ideal place to apply throttle (In most corners) according to Ross Bentley's book and every proficient driver I've talked to is BEFORE the apex. There's no reason to start applying throttle well after apex, in most cars, in most corners. If you balance the car well, you can apply some before or during apex. In modern racecars where left foot braking is the norm, good drivers apply some overlapping brake and throttle at the end of trailbraking, and then release the brake while applying more throttle. Not a lot, just a little. I think if you wait until the apex to apply throttle if you're *really* driving the limit, you will have unbalanced the car, either via coasting to the apex, or keeping too much load in the front.
      My 0.02 from talking to a lot of drivers and driving a lot in sims.

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  5 лет назад +5

      The old idiom goes something like this: On a track, you'll see the same 10 corners 100 times... Go do a rally, and you'll see 1000 corners, 1 time each. The math obviously isn't perfect, but the moral of the story rings true. That said, Arch is spot on: Try to get on the brakes and scrub most of your speed in a straight line, aim for a good line and trail brake in, and hopefully you can be back on the power before you get to the apex. That's plan A most of the time and looks good on a whiteboard, but if Plan A always works, you're probably not pushing hard enough. In the real world you'll end up on the brakes still past the apex sometimes for sure, and if that keeps you on the road, great. You're going to be a lot faster than at the wrong end of a tow strap.

    • @ArchOfficial
      @ArchOfficial 5 лет назад +2

      @@Teamoneilrally Yeah, agreed. Even in simulation, where crashing ends up with a press of the escape key and a few clicks and you're back, I've noticed myself and other drivers are reluctant to drive "ideally" when driving a rally/hillclimb for the first time, codriver or not. More so if you're doing actual driving. Unless you're Max Verstappen and don't know the difference :).

  • @cayman9815
    @cayman9815 3 года назад

    do not understand very well
    what is name of this school ?

  • @ArchOfficial
    @ArchOfficial 5 лет назад

    I think something more to consider is that modern radial tires generally have a squared off grip pattern. Meaning that you have physically more grip available to play with if you're braking and turning, or accelerating and turning, as opposed to just doing one. It's not a circle, it's an oval.

  • @JDMCOWBOY92
    @JDMCOWBOY92 5 лет назад

    Do you have the brake boosters takin out of your rally school cars?

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  5 лет назад +1

      We keep the brake boosters in most of the rally school cars... we do take them out of the Fiestas and replace the master cylinders so that the pedal feel is easy still, but the Subarus and BMWs and everything are still pretty standard from the factory.

    • @RChero1010
      @RChero1010 5 лет назад +1

      In the Subarus, how do you manage the brakes while applying throttle? When there's reduced vacuum in the intake manifold, you only get one or two presses of the brake pedal before it goes rock-solid. In the next few years I really want to go through a full course at Team O'Neil but in the meantime I try to pick up what I can for when I'm experimenting with my 01 legacy wagon in the snow. Until I can get stiffer sway bars, I am fighting understeer in every turn in the autocross events I go to... I wish there were a cheaper way to get behind the wheel with an instructor and experience this style of driving because college tuition limits me to sim racing, which is realistic enough to apply real techniques, but not real enough for you to learn them on your own.

  • @5637718
    @5637718 5 лет назад

    If you shift in the mid of the corner, then when do u heel and tow

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  5 лет назад +1

      Heel and toe is a good technique in some situations, but if you're at maximum braking coming into a corner, the speed is dropping fast enough that you often don't need to worry about it.

    • @5637718
      @5637718 5 лет назад

      Thank you for clarifying

  • @That_fella_named_J
    @That_fella_named_J 4 года назад

    Would this still to a fwd automatic? And would it be better to use with traction control on or off?

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  4 года назад +1

      This would work with an automatic, and yes turn off everything you can!

    • @That_fella_named_J
      @That_fella_named_J 4 года назад +1

      @@Teamoneilrally okay thanks, I plan to have some fun in winter with my daily driver

  • @ZsomborZsombibi
    @ZsomborZsombibi 5 лет назад +1

    Yep and you can even practice in daily traffic, without aggressive driving.

    • @RChero1010
      @RChero1010 5 лет назад +1

      Though you do have to be pushing your car fairly hard to feel the effects of it. Plus, it's probably harder on your brakes.

    • @ZsomborZsombibi
      @ZsomborZsombibi 5 лет назад

      Of course that is not about screaming tyres, but brakes and transmission with heel&toe is an option out there.

  • @KrustyKlown
    @KrustyKlown 4 года назад

    Trail braking is something that comes naturally to a fast driver, because if you don't do it, you spin out by braking too hard in the turn.. you have to ease off.. or over brake before turning, and let cars behind you dive under into the apex.

  • @Jake-dh9qk
    @Jake-dh9qk 4 года назад

    Hey, what is a good speed to maintain when turning corners?

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  4 года назад

      That completely depends on the angle of the corner, the tighter the corner is, the slower you have to go around it

    • @Jake-dh9qk
      @Jake-dh9qk 4 года назад

      @@Teamoneilrally if it's a medium difficulty corner, and your coming into the corner at 70mph, trailbreak then maintain speed throughout the corner, would 50-60mph be considered good? This is of course talking about non-racecars.

  • @TheRoyal769sr
    @TheRoyal769sr 5 лет назад

    1:41 drift over cones

  • @indiaonwheels5843
    @indiaonwheels5843 5 лет назад

    Are these cars with ABS

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  5 лет назад +2

      Negative, we disable the ABS as well as any traction control, stability control, etc. You will find that if you have ABS, your car will not be able to stop as quickly especially on a slippery road.

  • @salamdrik
    @salamdrik 7 месяцев назад

    Thats car whit No Abs right ?

  • @JacesOwnWorld
    @JacesOwnWorld 4 года назад

    I prefer heel-toe shifting to your blip throttle downshifting

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  4 года назад +1

      The easy thing to do is find a tight corner that's safe to practice on, come in as fast as possible and work on braking later and later, over and over, ten or twenty or a hundred times. After that session, you will probably have a very different opinion of heel toe shifting than you do now.

  • @dannykyle738
    @dannykyle738 5 лет назад

    I wouldnt recomend trail breaking on a motorcycle on the street. I guess you could in a late apex or very briefly in the beginning of the turn. But once your about 1/4 of the way through, the weight shift can easily throw your balance when on two wheels. Braking also tends to straighten out the bike. The pros probably do it when they are getting every last but of speed they can but it's not a major advantage on a street bike. Breaking before the turn and downshifting to help decelerate through the turn is much easier and arguably just as fast. Engine breaking is alot smoother. On a dirtbike tail breaking applies much more.

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  5 лет назад +1

      We try to leave what someone might do on the street up to them, but to answer your question: Trail braking is definitely a little more risky than the method you described, but it's also definitely faster. Trail braking on a bike is just hard full front brake, then gradually trailing off as you lean in for the corner. Keeping the weight on the front and the front forks compressed into the corner gets maximum grip out of the front tire and also alters the geometry of the bike, with the front compressed the wheelbase is shorter and you also have more rake angle, making the bike easier to turn. You'll see the top riders of every discipline using it, the MotoGP guys routinely come into corners hard enough on the front brake that the rear tire is floating completely off the ground. You're definitely correct that it's dangerous to ride on the street with that kind of commitment, nobody's normal Sunday ride should look like they're racing the Isle of Mann TT, but in an emergency it can save your butt. Say you mis-judge a corner and you've got a bunch too much speed on the way in... you've gotta trail brake or crash , those are your only two options. It's like learning skid control, you might not drive to work like Ken Block every morning but it's great to have in your back pocket when something goes wrong.

  • @truejayoh
    @truejayoh Год назад

    Does that car have ABS?

  • @JesseltonGaming
    @JesseltonGaming 4 года назад

    Wait but I think for slow cars it's quite hard? Because it's hard to accelerate fast n brake in a straight line while still having power to go out of the corner. Or is it?

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  4 года назад +1

      It'll work well in any car, as long as you're coming into the corner fast... If it's a 30mph corner and you can come in at even 50 or 60 then trail braking will work great. It's 100% a braking and steering technique on the way into the corner, how much acceleration you get on the way out is just a bonus.

    • @JesseltonGaming
      @JesseltonGaming 4 года назад

      @@Teamoneilrally ohh damnnn I see! I can't wait to have my licence and try stunts n techniques! Getting my licence this December. Thank youu!

  • @OKMX5
    @OKMX5 5 лет назад +4

    What, downshifting so late? I always downshift before the corner.

    • @OKMX5
      @OKMX5 5 лет назад +1

      Heel and toe should be solving that.

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  5 лет назад +10

      If you always have time to downshift before the corner, you're probably not braking as late and hard as you could be. On the street, that's a good thing! It's safe and consistent... but if you want to go racing, pick a safe corner somewhere and try going faster and faster into it and braking later and later. You'll probably find that if you're braking at the last possible moment, the shift is going to happen somewhere in the corner.

    • @orlindimitrov7322
      @orlindimitrov7322 5 лет назад

      @@Teamoneilrally What about heel to toeing as you brake hard, right before steering input begins? Or do you want to strictly lefty foot brake.

  • @TorneioCAC2011
    @TorneioCAC2011 4 года назад

    why not change gear before corner? that should help braking and not having to shift while turning

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  4 года назад

      That's very common, but you would have to brake earlier to accomplish that.
      If you brake at the last possible second, you often end up shifting in the corner.

  • @EdgarsLS
    @EdgarsLS 5 лет назад

    why do you have really thick boots?

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  5 лет назад +4

      Because it gets a little crazy sometimes here at Rally School and hiking boots are just easier if it's muddy or whatever... Driving shoes wouldn't last very long out here and hiking boots aren't terrible once you get used to them.

    • @ianholmquist8492
      @ianholmquist8492 5 лет назад

      New England all-purpose footwear. Can't beat it

    • @garyrowe58
      @garyrowe58 5 лет назад +1

      When i got my first rally car i drove it on the roafs to get used to it. Due to the fashion back then i was wearing cowboy boots, and when it came to the first event i had to drive in the cowboy boots because anything else felt too weird!
      As the navigator, hiking boots are great as they give you lots of traction when pushing the car out of a ditch ;)

  • @shadowwsk3507
    @shadowwsk3507 4 года назад

    I started to know to do trail braking GT 4 even before i knew it, am i talented?

  • @djstatyk1540
    @djstatyk1540 5 лет назад +1

    You sound like scotty kilmer

  • @capillarysystem
    @capillarysystem 6 месяцев назад

    Yeah I originally learned this from f1 videos

  • @Big-Monkey-Man
    @Big-Monkey-Man 5 лет назад +5

    This is just how I brake. I was never taught

    • @RamonPatrique
      @RamonPatrique 5 лет назад +3

      I used to break like this in my first years but i got thaught that i have to slow down completely before the corner.

    • @bigbaderek1978
      @bigbaderek1978 5 лет назад

      you must be a genius!!

  • @AutoFirePad
    @AutoFirePad 5 лет назад +7

    Why is it a special technique? I find it very natural: if you dont release the brakes after that strong braking the car will go straight.

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  5 лет назад +10

      You'd be shocked how many people, even on the racetrack or at a rally, don't ever really brake as hard or late as their vehicle is capable of.

    • @marcoVGpolo
      @marcoVGpolo 5 лет назад +4

      This is what people who haven’t been to a track think. Trail braking, or “holy shit I’m 100% going to hit the car in front of me” just isnt something that’s possible to practice on the street if you have any self preservation. It is a very simple concept but it DOES take practice!!! It’s a really horrendously vicious maneuver the first few times as you hit and eventually go past the absolute limit of adhesion

  • @chikomborerochigorimbo
    @chikomborerochigorimbo 5 лет назад

    Where is Team O'Neil based ?

    • @NothingXemnas
      @NothingXemnas 5 лет назад

      According to their profile, they are based at "White Mountains of New Hampshire".

    • @Teamoneilrally
      @Teamoneilrally  5 лет назад

      Just outside Littleton NH, basically a couple hours north of Boston in northern New Hampshire.

    • @triplthr
      @triplthr 5 лет назад

      in newry maine on july 19th and 20th is the new england forest rally last year was my first time going and i plan on going this year. as a spectator the first rally is the most mind blowing. the sounds of rocks smashing . its like you can hear and feel the momentum they have. i was sitting on a corner in pace notes it was probably a 3 right and travis pastrana david higgins and mckenna went thru that corner so fast that my heart rate went up. most insane thing iv seen done with a car

    • @triplthr
      @triplthr 5 лет назад

      but the second time might be even more mind blowing then the first. im soon to find out!