For the record, in 99% of driving scenarios, you probably don’t want to press the brake and gas at the same time. For the 1%, you can do something called brake boosting. This is where on turbo cars, you brake to maintain a slower speed, at the same time you press the gas to spool up the turbo, which results in you having little to no turbo lag while racing.
You would also do this momentarily (with automatic) when starting from a stop on a steep upward incline, like certain San Francisco street intersections. Get the gas going slightly while holding the brake, then ease off to move forward without rolling back. Because the guy behind you is always too close for comfort.
Similar technique would be used for manuals as well. You’d heal-toe on a hill so you don’t roll back, same with downshifting and slowing down quickly to make a turn.
There’s also heal-toe shifting. If done correctly, it puts less wear on your transmissions (syncros, in particular), and is also smoother. It’s a quick blip of throttle while downshifting under braking.
So it’s not just a racing technique, though it is debatable how much it matters. Modern transmissions are pretty reliable as long as you don’t abuse them. Rest of the car could easily disintegrate around it before the syncros get ground away.
Nope, jus that the front breaks have more breaking force than the rear. The power from the engine will overwhelm the rear breaks, so for a standing burnout you need the strong front breaks to not get overwhelmed.
Why do it want to do this?
you can share your screenshot with the mechanic before you go in for repairs
For the record, in 99% of driving scenarios, you probably don’t want to press the brake and gas at the same time. For the 1%, you can do something called brake boosting. This is where on turbo cars, you brake to maintain a slower speed, at the same time you press the gas to spool up the turbo, which results in you having little to no turbo lag while racing.
You would also do this momentarily (with automatic) when starting from a stop on a steep upward incline, like certain San Francisco street intersections. Get the gas going slightly while holding the brake, then ease off to move forward without rolling back. Because the guy behind you is always too close for comfort.
Similar technique would be used for manuals as well. You’d heal-toe on a hill so you don’t roll back, same with downshifting and slowing down quickly to make a turn.
There’s also heal-toe shifting. If done correctly, it puts less wear on your transmissions (syncros, in particular), and is also smoother. It’s a quick blip of throttle while downshifting under braking.
So it’s not just a racing technique, though it is debatable how much it matters. Modern transmissions are pretty reliable as long as you don’t abuse them. Rest of the car could easily disintegrate around it before the syncros get ground away.
In an automatic car. It’s a good way to do a burn out provided the engine has enough torque and the breaking is biased to the front.
What does that mean, the front falls off?
Nope, jus that the front breaks have more breaking force than the rear. The power from the engine will overwhelm the rear breaks, so for a standing burnout you need the strong front breaks to not get overwhelmed.
Oh my, stop it… now the rear can also catch fire?! 🤣
just in case...
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