Junkyard Dog
Well-Known Member
In all seriousness, stickier tires will help a lot. I am running Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tires (315/30 on 19 x 11 inch wheels on the rear), and they stick pretty well on the street.
And there is a big difference in a 480, 486, 500 horsepower engine and a 350 horsepower 90s Corvette engine or the horsepower of a vintage Alfa Romeo or a 315 horsepower 455 in a Buick Riviera. Folks like to think back to the "good, old days" of muscle car engines, but no big block factory engine back then could have held a candle to the Gen 4 Coyote engine that Ford installs in the 7th generation Mustang. If this engine was around back in the late 60s/early 70s, it would have been legendary still today, and 50 year old cars with it installed would be selling at Jackson Barrett for $5 million plus. We live in a time with great automotive technology and high horsepower engines. I mean, really, run in the 11s in the quarter mile off the showroom floor? Nobody was doing that in any car in the 1970s. Tons of modifications and slicks and running in the 13s gave you status, and running in the 12s with modifications made you a street legend.
So, yeah, if you get to happy on the throttle in a turn with a 500 horsepower engine, well, no big surprise, you are going to get the rear end to kick out. The solution is to be gentler on the throttle. Take it to your local HPDE day. That is what your instructor will say more than anything else, the word "gentle" as you exit turns, especially if you are naturally aggressive on the race track.
And there is a big difference in a 480, 486, 500 horsepower engine and a 350 horsepower 90s Corvette engine or the horsepower of a vintage Alfa Romeo or a 315 horsepower 455 in a Buick Riviera. Folks like to think back to the "good, old days" of muscle car engines, but no big block factory engine back then could have held a candle to the Gen 4 Coyote engine that Ford installs in the 7th generation Mustang. If this engine was around back in the late 60s/early 70s, it would have been legendary still today, and 50 year old cars with it installed would be selling at Jackson Barrett for $5 million plus. We live in a time with great automotive technology and high horsepower engines. I mean, really, run in the 11s in the quarter mile off the showroom floor? Nobody was doing that in any car in the 1970s. Tons of modifications and slicks and running in the 13s gave you status, and running in the 12s with modifications made you a street legend.
So, yeah, if you get to happy on the throttle in a turn with a 500 horsepower engine, well, no big surprise, you are going to get the rear end to kick out. The solution is to be gentler on the throttle. Take it to your local HPDE day. That is what your instructor will say more than anything else, the word "gentle" as you exit turns, especially if you are naturally aggressive on the race track.
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