jimpastorius wrote:
Stacy King wrote:
The sooner you start learning it, the easier it will be to incorporate into your driving.
By her own admission she had issues with downshifting at her first event and you want her to incorporate h&t? Good instruction should focus on getting the basics down. When you have mastered those or well on your way, then work on advanced techniques.
I'm not exactly saying that for her second DE she should concentrate on it... but as I think I said before, anything that can be done on the street to "learn the car" is good, and
As Soon As She Feels Comfortable starting to work HT into her learning, it will be better in the long run doing it in the relatively safe confines of a beginner run group than it might be waiting to do it in the always crowded intermediate groups.
Really and Truly, I think learning HT (and threshold braking for that matter) requires it's own event. Since the act of heel-toe downshifting is VERY vehicle dependent, and driver dependent (small feet, big feet, wide feet) in addition to being speed dependent... I think there needs to be a third alternate to learning it on track and learning it on the street.
Otherwise, I'm of the camp that thinks you can learn some useful things on the street (how your engine responds to blips for example) but to REALLY learn HT, it must be done under track conditions.