6 Ways Left Foot Braking Will Improve Your Driving

It's one of the trickiest skills to master, particularly for people used to using the clutch, but mastering the use of your left foot for braking will make you drive faster and smoother
6 Ways Left Foot Braking Will Improve Your Driving

1. Puts you in control of weight shifting

6 Ways Left Foot Braking Will Improve Your Driving

One of the most important aspects of fast driving is controlling where the weight of the car is. This is something that’s most obviously useful in rallying, where throwing the car’s weight from side to side while keeping the throttle pinned is the best way to maintain momentum. You can also use this in grip driving situations, though, as modulating the brake and throttle can help keep the car settled in order to minimise understeer and oversteer.

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This might seem counter-intuitive, but if you have a front-wheel drive car with a differential this technique will drastically improve the speed you can carry through, and out of, a turn.

As you accelerate through a corner you can push on the brakes with your left foot to distribute the torque more effectively through the front wheels. This allows you to carry more speed as power is spread more evenly across the two front tyres, and ensures your exit speed is higher. Easing off the brake on corner exit then gives you full power for the straight to take full advantage of the extra speed you’ve already carried without unsettling the balance of the car or spinning the wheels.

3. Settling the suspension

6 Ways Left Foot Braking Will Improve Your Driving

Again, this is a technique most useful in rally. When braking and shifting weight around, you’re also loading and unloading the suspension in different ways. You can take this knowledge and use it to counteract unwelcome movements.

For example, if you spot a bump ahead, you can keep your right foot on the throttle to keep momentum up, while dabbing the brakes to load and unload the suspension. With the extra travel available you can glide over bumps that might otherwise have unsettled the car.

4. Tidying your line

6 Ways Left Foot Braking Will Improve Your Driving

Here’s another useful tip for bringing the nose in in high speed corners. If you’re cornering at speed but feel yourself washing wide, the answer is to scrub some speed. You could lift your foot of the throttle, but a sudden shift forwards in weight could cause you to oversteer. Instead, applying a little brake while still on the throttle ensures all four wheels are being slowed, and your line is tightened without unsettling the machine.

5. Trail braking

6 Ways Left Foot Braking Will Improve Your Driving

This is trickier in a manual car where you’re using your left foot on the clutch, but it is possible with a quick shift of your feet. The idea is to gradually ease off the brake as you enter a corner and begin to accelerate out of it. This has the advantage of keeping the weight forward, giving the front tyres the highest possible grip for turn in and limiting understeer. It also reduces unwanted weight shifting that can come from lifting off the brake quickly in order to accelerate, as is required with right foot braking.

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When you receive driver coaching, one of the first things they’ll try to get in your brain is that you should either be fully accelerating or fully braking. Now obviously there are exceptions to this, such as some of the techniques above and in longer corners that require throttle modulation. However, for the most part, you should either be braking or accelerating - anything else loses time.

Therefore, every time you brake with your right foot you have a very brief period in limbo where you’re doing neither. Add together all those fractions of a second over the course of a lap or a race, and it can be the difference between a podium or not. This might not be too relevant to road driving, but for trackday drivers looking to shave time lap after lap, this could help immeasurably.

Comments

Anonymous

Was the video with chris harris filmed before jeremy clarkson lost his hair as well?

02/24/2016 - 04:59 |
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aelfwyne

Many modern cars with traction control and electronic stability do NOT respond well to left foot braking. Some even throw error codes and go into limp mode if they catch you with your foot on the gas and brake at the same time.

02/24/2016 - 06:04 |
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Anonymous

This is why bikes are so easy to go really fast in. Trail breaking and manipulating the suspension is way more intuitive than it is in a car.

02/24/2016 - 06:16 |
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Victor Kása

I mee

02/24/2016 - 07:00 |
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Josh Mott (Prelude Squad)

Funny, this is actually the technique I use naturally when driving! It just feels right to me…

02/24/2016 - 07:05 |
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Hless 1

Braking as you accelerate? My boring 4 door sedan does it for me already (efficiently). If you need any of this crap… stop driving altogether. Never in my life did I feel a need for left foot braking and it went bad every time I tried. I have 4 settings and it takes fractions to switch to any. On the gas, off the gas, none of the above or braking. I can go from on the gas to braking in less time than it takes me to formulate the thought. I don’t think about it, it just happens. Look it up in Death Rally. Even Duke Nukem will tell you I have petrol in my veins. The best way to do something is to do it in the right sequence in the allotted time. Insert insult here: this is why manuals are dying.

02/24/2016 - 08:49 |
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slevo beavo

Most cars from the last 10-15 year deactivates the throttle when the brakes are pushed

02/24/2016 - 09:28 |
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The Peugeot 206 HDi of my brother does this, when you accelerate while on the brakes the Engine Light comes on and the throttle is reduced..very anoying..
And if you do this in a BMW you have an error in the error history “Accelerator/Brake
implausible” :D

02/24/2016 - 13:46 |
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Unfortunatly cars have become numb and dumbed down by electronics

02/24/2016 - 14:01 |
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suchdoge

When Chris Harris had a full head of hair.

02/24/2016 - 11:13 |
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Anonymous

“So Sir, how exatly did the accident occur?”

02/24/2016 - 12:49 |
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Anonymous

Left foot braking is also often used in some turbo cars where the driver can keep the car in boost during a corner and release the brake to shoot out of the turn. This was a popular technique with Group B rally drivers in the 1980s :)

02/24/2016 - 13:19 |
2 | 0

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