Can someone explain what trail breaking is?
Here is a guy trail braking on a kart. Perfect example of how an advanced driver can use trail braking in a turn and use it to turn the car efficiently. Link
I trail brake on every turn that requires me slow down before it. It happens naturally at first since your unsure on your entry speed, then when you get comfortable with it, you use it to rotate the car.
On the other turns I use the throttle to induce some rear steer.
On the other turns I use the throttle to induce some rear steer.
quite motherfucking true! that was a pretty nasty turn
trail braking explained by modified mag official formula drift d
"Breaking Drift (Trail Braking) Primarily used for medium to lower speed turns, this is a more advanced method of inducing drift where the driver purposely comes into the turn hotter than normal, trail braking to shift the cars weight to the outermost-front tir. The weight shifting combined with the vehicles entry speed will initiate the loss of traction to the rear wheels. As the rear wheels break traction, the driver counter steers into the turn to control a cars momentum."
These other drift techniques are explained "Feint" "power oversteer" "side brake(e-brake)" "Clutch Kick" "Shift Lock" and "Kansei(Con'-say)(momentum Drift)
trail braking explained by modified mag official formula drift d
"Breaking Drift (Trail Braking) Primarily used for medium to lower speed turns, this is a more advanced method of inducing drift where the driver purposely comes into the turn hotter than normal, trail braking to shift the cars weight to the outermost-front tir. The weight shifting combined with the vehicles entry speed will initiate the loss of traction to the rear wheels. As the rear wheels break traction, the driver counter steers into the turn to control a cars momentum."
These other drift techniques are explained "Feint" "power oversteer" "side brake(e-brake)" "Clutch Kick" "Shift Lock" and "Kansei(Con'-say)(momentum Drift)
He was asking what was trail braking, he never mentioned trying it in a "heavy" mustang gt. I just didnt want him thinking it was one thing when it was something different.
Trail braking is your friend as long as you use it appropriately. Ask DRFTwizard what turns he trail brakes and he'll probably say Start to Finish. E30s slide like a sumbitch on corner entry.
Trail braking is your friend as long as you use it appropriately. Ask DRFTwizard what turns he trail brakes and he'll probably say Start to Finish. E30s slide like a sumbitch on corner entry.
Either my feet are the wrong size or its impossiable to heal toe effectively on a 96 GT
trail braking explained by modified mag official formula drift d
"Breaking Drift (Trail Braking) Primarily used for medium to lower speed turns, this is a more advanced method of inducing drift where the driver purposely comes into the turn hotter than normal, trail braking to shift the cars weight to the outermost-front tir. The weight shifting combined with the vehicles entry speed will initiate the loss of traction to the rear wheels. As the rear wheels break traction, the driver counter steers into the turn to control a cars momentum."
I usually only do it in 4 at VIR, but sometimes also in 1, 3, and/or 14 depending upon how much my car is understeering that day.
Jon
With a car as fast as yours in a slow run group such as 1 or even 2 you probably rarely see open track going into T1 or rollercoaster which are great spots to practice heel/toe. I cant heel/toe to save my life on many street cars, but on the track when I can threshold brake I have zero problems. Just a comfort level you gotta reach....much like trail braking.
Also turns 3 and 4 are good turns to take advantage of the inside rumble strip. It will help the car transfer weight to the wheels with the most grip and rotate.
Good I mean great example:
Last edited by DRFTwizard; Apr 5, 2007 at 11:32 PM.






