I go along with this. By the time your brain has processed a light telling you there is slip, your body has already detected it and taken the appropriate action. Unless of course the system is not allowing the driver to get close to the limit, in which case it is slowing him down.CMSMJ1 wrote: β21 Sep 2024, 00:54Do you drive, ride or do anything that you think that an alert of slippage would be useful? Do you drive karts?
I've ridden MTB for 30 years and I raced* motorbikes for a couple years before I had kids and in these activities, though not car racing, I think any sort of alert would be too late. I'm handy in a kart**
Am I missing something? How does a secondary alert beat the backside, the guts or rest of the body in dealing with lack of traction?
* Slow, but I won the final 2 races I where l entered
** I beat my son mostly
There are also circumstances where it is beneficial to be just "the wrong side of the line"