Same is true of oversteer, push that harder, what happens? At least if I push on the entry with understeer, chances are I can regain the car without leaving the track. Push even harder with oversteer, well I think you get the pictureraymondu999 wrote:Ok fine. But in a situation where it understeers on the way in to a corner, that might take away a lot of confidence from the driver as he might not feel the nose wants to go where he wants it to. So saying that understeer can be pushed harder isn't always true either. Heck, it could even increase the understeer.
In 90% of the time, understeer is due to a lack of weight on the front end. So the driver can input several things to make the front stick, knowing full well that the front will return to understeer, if not enough is done, with an exception, if one of those things is too much rotation, he may spin the car.
Things like, heavy trail braking, touching the brake mid corner, an abrupt lift (if the throttle is on), pitching the car with the steering wheel, jacking at the throttle, applying lot's of throttle early...things are done in combination or combinations of several of them.... not to mention the least desirable one, slowing down, which is why it's left out, as not a consideration of an aggressive driver.
With OS, gentle with the steering input, overly smooth throttle application, backing out gently with throttle (to prevent running out of race track)
It is very interesting to look at the two handling problems OS vs US and the things drivers are doing to get around them. Interesting enough that US has things that are in the direction of setting faster laps. Such as aggressive early throttle and lot's of it. Later braking, due to heavy trail braking.
BTW, we are only talking slight understeer/oversteer in either case.