Auto-X, Road Race, SCCA, NASA, & other motorsports
By matt j
#157990 even though the season is nearing end, i wanted to post this up for all you guys thinking about autocrossing. Hope it helps!

here is a post that one of the guys made on our local solo 2 message board, thought it might be helpful to some people
1. As soon as you pass the start line, you are only losing time.
Minimize how much time you lose. It's not just going faster, it's
spending less time on the course.
2. The trick is to drive 10/10ths. A novice will drive 7/10ths and then
not realize that they went to 13/10ths. Learn the edge and drive it.
That may mean some cones get hit and you spin. It's what teaches you
where 10/10ths is.

3. There are fast parts and there are slow parts. Learn the difference.

4. Don't square off the corners and point and shoot drive. A lot of
corners are parts of smooth arcs you can make. It's faster to drive a
smooth arc than a short straight and two jerky turns.

5. Be aggressive in chicanes. Attack them, stay in front of the turns
and as straight as you can. Getting "behind" in a chicane is a bad
thing.

6. Doing this well means being smooth. Being smooth DOES NOT mean you
are slow. To drive the car smoothly may require controlled chaos in the
car. Fast hand and foot movements do not mean you are not smooth.

7. Know your line you intend on driving. Understand it. Look for it. If
you drive such that you are forcing yourself off that line, you made a
mistake and need to slow down. The line is everything, unless you are
wrong about where the line is...then you need to change your mind.

8. Look ahead to where you want to exit the turn. Adjust your speed into
the corner to make sure your car will be on the right spot when your
exit the corner.

9. It's better to corner under acceleration than braking. Brake earlier
and then get on the throttle as quick as you can.

10. The earlier throttle points will be faster. Give up the end of the
straight to make your corner exit faster. That speed coming out of the
corner will carry thru the whole straight following the corner.

11. Do not try to save runs. If you get screwed up, go off course or mow
down cones. This saves tires.

12. Understeer is often caused by going in to a corner too hot. To
reduce understeer, straighten out the steering and/or reduce throttle
input.

13. A lift or quick stab at the brakes can cause the front of the car to
weight and allow better turn in.

14. Alignments are important.

15. If you start going slower or are less succesful than you should be,
check the car. Sometimes things change and it's hard to notice.

16. Seat time is important.

17. Autocross deliberately. Try to drive deliberately. Not just
reacting...but control the steering and drive the line. Then do it
faster.

18. Don't worry about long lists of tips. Work on one or two things at
a time. Don't try to adjust everything, put in a new swaybar and struts,
try out Hoosiers, and decide to use left foot braking all in one
weekend. Make changes one at a time and see how they feel.

19. There are many ways to setup your car and your driving can
accomodate them. Spend more time on your driving than your car setup.
Human nature is that it's easier to point to your car, or the classing,
or maybe someone else is cheating, or they spent more. But the biggest
variable in autocrossing is still always the driver.

and here is another
For real beginners:

1. If the back end gets loose in a corner DO NOT LIFT.

2. "In a spin, two feet in."

3. Not all of us have a Z06, momentum is everything.

4. If the car is pushing, wind off lock until it hooks up again. Adding lock will only cook your tires.

5. "It's a corolla not a rally car, quit trying to drive it sideways!"

6. Utilizing your brakes to their fullest will save more time than your accelerator ever will.

7. When they say the slolem is optional it doesn't mean you can go around it.

8. If you hit a cone don't let it throw your concentration, remember, you ran it's punk ass over

9. Don't let your hands get crossed up during a run. Practice proper hand technique every day on the street.

I did not write this up, i found this on a solo2 board i was on when i lived in san diego, i believe it has alot of useful information for beginners, and even people that need a little bit of a refresher, i posted this up on honda-tech almost 6 years ago now, and i keep posting it up to every board i sign up for because i believe the info helps. So enjoy and happy cone carving!
User avatar
By ikon
#158273 man this is good stuff. u struck gold. its hard for begginers to get good info. :thumb:
By matt j
#158807 yeah i saw it and it was a great write up, i wish i could take credit for it but obviously i cant lol. Hope people use it and grow from it.
User avatar
By ikon
#158830 x2 :thumb:
User avatar
By STOCK4DR
#178528 X3
User avatar
By STOCK4DR
#178529 EXCELLENT post !!! :thumb:
User avatar
By jemm
#206059 a love it.... one of the best post i cheked on....

and always remember.... focus... focus.... focus....
User avatar
By jemm
#211970 this one i didnt get.... sorry for being slow....

2. The trick is to drive 10/10ths. A novice will drive 7/10ths and then
not realize that they went to 13/10ths. Learn the edge and drive it.
That may mean some cones get hit and you spin. It's what teaches you
where 10/10ths is.