I'm afraid you dont know what this technique actually is used for.Mashed wrote:Trail braking is a simple technique to get the rear end of the vehicle to rotate for the corner. For obvious reasons, it transfers more weight to the front of the car thus making the rear of the car light and easy to rotate before turning in for the corner. Hope that makes sense. Basically the technique is used with cars that tend to understeer and/or on real sharp corners.
a) It's not simple. Balancing braking and steering perfectly is damned difficult requires fine co-ordination between steering and braking. The concept however IS simple. Brake hard, slowly let of the brake as you increase steering angle. At the apex, you'll have max steering lock and zero brake pedal depression.
b) It can be used in high speed turns, albeit you'll not brake all the way to the apex.
c) Regarding the weight transfer scenario, you WILL put more weight on the front, but the TRANSFER of weight from front to rear will be more gradual, especially if you trail brake all the way to the apex, thereby causing less disturbance to your car.
d) There is no reason to NOT use trail braking in an oversteery car. However, trail braking makes best use of tyres if the car is NEUTRAL
e) Trail braking is used to go faster everywhere