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Team O'Neil in the Press
< Back | European Car , Jan. 2003 |
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Dancing
Through the Woods
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Winter-time Rally with Timo
Text and Photography by Tim McKinney
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"When you're
winning a rally, there is nothing else going on, it is just
a quiet world. You're dancing though the woods. It may appear
to be something quite different to the spectators, but it is
quiet and peaceful when everything is right.
"There is a surprising amount
of grip on ice, "said Tim O'Neil, as the trees flashed
past. He grabbed third gear and accelerated. The old 4000 Quattro
we rode in was propelled by a very new ur-quattro turbo drivetrain,
and it slithered up the narrow, icy forest road as the tires
struggled with the 300-plus ponies. "The problem is unlike
gravel, when you lose grip, it is GONE! Period!" I took
small comfort in knowing Tim was behind the wheel and not me.
They say good things come in threes.
I might argue for fours. I recently found myself back in Franconia,
N.H., under Team O'Neil's excellent tutelage for a three-day
refresher course and Day four of rally school. This is just
two weeks after a fortnight-long trip that included watching
North America's best rallyists at the Sno*Drift ProRally in
Atlanta, Mich., a chance to slide Saab 9-3s around the Pas de
la Casa ice track in Andorra with Simo Lampinen, and two days
at the Swedish Rally chasing the world's best through the woods
around Hagfors with the Saab Museum's irrepressible Peter Backstrom.
I was even treated to a ride in one of Peter's vintage two-stroke
Saab 93 rallycars. Shades of Erik Carlsson! |
Now it was my turn
to challenge winter. "This is a perishable skill,"
said instructor Chuck Long. He was right. It had been 18 months
since my first summertime visit (ec, March 2001) to the Team
O'Neil Rally School. I hadn't built a practice car, and I hadn't
stolen out late at night to practice pendulum turns. A three
day Skip Barber racing School and follow-up Car Control Clinic
had me thinking more about trail-braking that leftfoot braking
and had taken me out of rally mode. And like the competitors
at the two rallies I had just attended, I would have to do without
the luxury of soft and forgiving snowbanks as I readjusted my
mindset and prepared to contend with an extremely tricky mix
of ice, snow and slush.
"Last year the snow banks
kept us in the rally three times, once at 90 mph!" noted
2001 ProRally champion Mark Lovell in Michigan. "The trees
were closer this year."
Observed O'Neil, "When we
talk about winter driving, it's all about being very smooth
and adjusting your speed to the conditions. Everybody says,
'I'm a pretty good driver in the summer, it's only in the winter
that I'm not a good.' This tells me maybe you're not as good
as you think any time of the year. In the summer if you go into
a corner a little fast or turn in a little late, you're still
going to be able to make up got it because of the amount of
grip available. That grip isn't there in the winter, and when
people aren't able to make their problems are obvious. If you
have any bad habits, they really show up in the winter. I view
winter driving as rallying's most difficult skill to master."
Rallying, driving at "maximum
attack" on loose surfaces has techniques radically different
from those used in road-racing. "Good guys never turn early"
is the mantra at Skip Barber, but here in the White Mountains
O'Neil teaches, "Rallying is all about having all your
turning dome before the apex." Skip says you should lift,
brake in a straight line, then turn (we'll leave the nuances
of trail-braking out of this discussion). Timo says lift, turn
and then brake. |
"This
is the Scandinavian technique, left foot braking. Adding
the brake to the throttle and steering wheel to help steer
the car means you can use less of each. Once you start
to get your throttle, brake and steering coordinated,
all of the sudden you need far less steering. Get your
hands." About the only thing both agree on is the
advantage of taking a late apex through an unfamiliar
corner, though for different reasons.
On the road course, a late
apex allows you to safely "back up" to the optimal
line through any given corner. Road racers see the same
10 corners 100 times each through the course of a weekend,
and learning the proper line is fundamental for a beginning
road racer. Rallyists, on the other hand, slide through
1,000 different corners one time each. |
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| A late apex leaves the rally driver room in case
a corner tightens unexpectedly or some other surprise lies around
the bend. For a beginning rally driver, learning perfect lines
and apexes isn't as important as learning the car control skills
that you keep you on the road to the finish of the event. The
faster you go, race or rally, the more important the proper
line becomes. |
| The width of the road also has a big influence
on driving style. If the stage is very wide, a proper
racing line is the faster than a "Scandinavian Flick,"
or pendulum turn. As the road narrows, like most rally
stages, left-foot braking and pendulum turns are faster.
Either way, the same rule is, "Eyes up! Look through
the corner and as far ahead as possible." Just remember.
Looking where you want to go as a rally car slides sideways
through a corner may require looking out the co-driver's
window. Unlike pavement racing, where you adjust your
speed before the corner, the typical rally corning technique
involves sliding the car through the corner. Turn in early
maybe lift just a little and add some braking with the
left foot. Weight transfers to the front, increasing the
grip and offsetting the car's tendency to understeer,
the LFB generates some oversteer and the rear end starts
to swing around. |
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| Countersteer to offset the oversteer, and add power to cancel
the swing when you can see through the corner. If you need to
slow more, go more sideways. All turning is done well before
the apex. Sliding the tires sideways across the surface sweeps
away the loose gravel and gets the tire down to the better grip
below the loose surface. The idea is to maintain as much speed
as possible through an unknown corner and to use the brakes,
not to slow but to rotate the car. Nine out of ten corners on
a rally stage are faster than your think-just always be ready
for the tenth! |
| Winter rallying demands
a mix of both rally and pavement techniques. With no extra
grip available at maximum cornering speeds, road racers
lift, brake in a straight line and then turn. As conditions
on a stage become more and more slippery, the rally driver
begins to do the same thing. There is no extra grip on
shinny ice, and all braking needs to be done before the
turn. "Grip is constantly changing in the winter.
There's deep snow, crunchy snow slippery snow, ice, gravel,
frozen gravel, slush and on and on. There are so many
variables in the winter that you need to be really good
at constantly making lots of little decisions and adjustments
based on changing conditions," said O'Neil. |
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| "In
the winter, because you have to be so much more careful
with weight transfer, wheel lock-up and wheelspin, you
must be able to LFB. Under aggressive driving in winter
conditions, LFB becomes very important," continued
O'Neil. "When it is slick, always have some brake
on, even just 1- or 2% to help control wheelspin and control
understeer. The traction control is your left foot (think
weight transfer and extra grip). On ice you need to turn
in less than you think. A big
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steering angle (especially
with sudden inputs-remember, you must be smooth) lose
the grip, and adding more unwind the wheel to find the
grip again even though it seems wrong to turn left to
go right. LFB can help rotate the car at small steering
angles."
You can also use the "swing" LFB generates to
your advantage. Sliding through the slalom, or around
a twisty stage, it is possible to carry the swing generated
at the first corner through the entire run. Lift, turn,
brake, release the brake, accelerate (control the swing),
countersteer. If you hold your slide, it doesn't take
much input to use the initial swing to rotate the car
the other direction for the next corner. Get it right,
and you use almost no steering on the icy course as the
car happily swings through the cones. |
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Add just a
couple more elements to the above, and you'll be doing
the "Scandinavian Flick" in no time. Approaching
a T-junction on a narrow road, rally drivers will move
to the inside, opposite the racer's line and slow (threshold
brake) to 35 mph or so to set up a pendulum turn. On ice
it is especially important to be disciplined with speed.
Lift (at 25 meters), turn (away from the corner), brake,
release the brake (13 meters), turn (backwards the corner),
blip the throttle, countersteer. The rear will pendulum
around the front (hence the name), and you will have all
your turning done well before the apex. Add a little LFB
to control wheelspin, accelerate to stop the swing, power
past the apex and be on your merry way, having used the
virtually no road at all.
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Equipment,
particularly tire selection, plays a huge role in
winter rallying. The Pirelli teams picked wrong
the first leg in Sweden, Michel didn't, and the
Peugeots were able to open an insurmountable lead.
"I wouldn't be nearly as brave if I didn't
always have the tire for the conditions," said
O'Neil. "Gravel tires are bad in the snow,
snow tires are bad on ice, and ice tires are bad
in snow and gravel. If you have the wrong tires,
no matter how talented you are, all you can do is
slow down and take it easy."
Mental preparation
is also an essential element in rallying. "You
have to be really focused, really pay attention,"
he continued. "Everything needs to be slowed
down in the winter. If you do everything just right
you get to live! If you are not careful, you night
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yourself thinking,'I'm upside down, it's
night, it's 45 below here in northern Quebec, and nobody
saw me go over the bank. It doesn't matter how many skills
you have if you can't use them out in the woods, in the
dark when the lights are flickering the oil pressure buzzer
is going, the tires are worn out, one brake is gone and
the co-driver is yelling. You have to realize you need
to slow down and use the 'co-driver yelling/the tires
are gone/we have no brakes technique.' If you go off the
bubble, you have to recognize it and slow down. You can't
go full speed in the car and only half speed in your brain."
The instructors at Team
O'Neil continually emphasize the need to let a great run
sink in. Stop, get out of car and let your body remember
what just happened. Soon instinct will take over and you
will move to the next level of driving. On Day Two I was
distracted and kept making mistakes. Setting up for one
pendulum turn, in a car that didn't like to rotate, I
stabbed the clutch instead of the brake. While half my
brain was busy berating itself, the other half realized
I was in a car, on ice, moving along quite smartly, pointed
the wrong direction and about to crash. Without really
thinking about it, I stabbed the throttle as I turned
back, countersteered, controlled the wheelspin with a
little LFB as I added throttle, and finished the best
pendulum turn I've ever done. Never touched a cone. It
was so pretty the guys following behind stopped and started
clapping.
"Sometimes," said
O'Neil, "you just have to grab the car by the neck
and put it where you want it." Now I know what he
means. |
< Back | European Car , Jan. 2003
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