Two for the Road is a hangout for mystery writers Tammy Kaehler and Simon Wood to chat, reminisce, gossip, speculate and argue about all things motorsport.

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Born Slippy


By Simon
A couple of weeks ago I was reminiscing about my old Fiesta XR2, which was a great little car but understeered like crazy if you pushed it little too much.   And this got me thinking about handling characteristics of modern cars. 
Remembering my first few cars—which were never all that old—all of them kept me on my toes.  They understeered, locked their brakes, didn’t brake all that well, suffered from brake fade, came without power steering, aquaplaned at a hint of standing water, and a bunch of other heart skipping  capabilities.  They weren’t terrible cars.  They were cars of their time.  These were the things we dealt with as drivers.
Fast forward twenty-five years and I look at the last couple of cars I’ve owned and it’s a different story.  I used to own a Subaru Impreza which I tried to throw around in the rain but the four-wheel drive and traction control kept everything in check.  The Hyundai Tiburon I’ve been driving for the last ten years is a great little car.  I bought it specifically because it was one of the last cars you could buy without ABS, traction control and all the other smart car goodies.  Ignoring a couple of big moments, it’s a hard car to lose control of, except in the rain.  So technology has come a long way.  Yay technology!
But is that a good thing?  I’m not so sure.
Firstly, from a funability standpoint, I actually want a loose handling car from time to time.  It’s quite nice to feel a car breakaway from under you in a corner so you can bring it back.  I like to anticipate and compensate for a car’s shortcomings.  This is what driving is all about.  If it wasn’t fun, I’d get the bus every day.  
Secondly and more importantly, I don’t think super safe handling cars are a good thing.  I think ABS and traction control are great things but we put too much faith in them.  They stop us from knowing the limits of our vehicles.  Now not all of us want to know our cars’ limits but we should get a progressive feel for the limit.  I find it a little scary that the onboard computers rob us of that ability because when a car lets go, we won’t be prepared for what comes next and speed threshold is going to be a lot higher than we would want on that occasion.  It makes us complacent, lazy and ill-prepared for a big moment.  And that’s not good.
I may be an old fuddy-duddy but I want a car to drive, not a car that drives me.  Then again, I don’t like cell phones.  J

2 comments:

  1. My first NEW car purchase- was a 2000 Toyota Rav4 - it was small and quite spunky for a 4-cylinder automatic (especially since my previous car was a heavy v8 brake eater of a Chevy). And that sucker was so light all it would take is someone to spit in the road and it would hydroplane. Ahh fun times.

    My current car has that stabilitract/traction control voodoo...and frankly? It scares the freaking daylights out of me when it engages (here is where my brother would tell me to quit driving like a jerk in the rain and it won't engage). It causes the car to practically squat and makes me jump out of my skin.

    My parents bought a 2013 Malibu- and that thing is constantly beeping at them: YOU MIGHT BE DRIFTING, YOU MIGHT BE SPEEDING...PERHAPS NOW IS A GOOD TIME TO BRAKE. It's annoying.

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