graball wrote:
Although I have never used one, I cannot see for the life of me how a cradle raising a cars wheels is going to teach someone how to correct a skid on a slippery surface. How often in a skid does one wheel get raised off the ground or whatever they do on these things? To learn to control a skid on a slippery surface you have to do it in a car that reacts as a normal car. Ok the tyres may be bald and the pressures too high but at least they would all be equal and the suspension would be doing it's job correctly.
Could it be this cradle training is the reason why skid pan training is not helping people learn?
One of the members of this forum aptly described how a skid cradle cannot respond accurately to all driver inputs.
I came up with what I call 'the ArmorAll trick' after noticing that, after I leave the car wash, I can't take a turn out at more than ten miles an hour for almost a mile or so, without doing an impression of Slidey McDriftersson.
Since I can't afford to soap an entire parking lot, I simply put several generous, sloppy coats of ArmorAll on my tires, and slide around the parking lot for about fifteen to twenty minutes at a time. Now, I can practice 'inclement weather' driving techniques whenever I like, even if it's 105°F outside!
I tend to believe the weightily accredited professionals when they say that insufficient practice time is the main issue - even when they don't believe what they're saying.
However, don't take this to mean that I find no fault with a skid cradle. Just because it isn't
the reason, doesn't mean it isn't
A reason.
Most drivers are most likely to slide when road and tire grip are both already compromised by a substance between them,so that's the most realistic way to prepare a skid pan; just pick your poison.
Tires that are most likely to slide are in fact bald, so that's the most realistic way to prepare the skid car. It's ironic that the likelihood of hydroplaning is inversely related to tire pressure, but 50psi won't make up for slicks, so there you go.
How wide should the tires be on a skid car? For example, the stock tires on my Caprice could be 215/75R15", 225/70R15", 225/75R15", 235/70R15", or 255/50R17", and I've personally witnessed Caprices wearing 255/65R15", and even 275/60R15". Personally, 235mm is as wide as I'll go.
(I do not truly know of which suspension package would be most likely to slide.)
The skid car should, however, be equipped with
fully defeatable ABS, Traction Control, Stability Control, Roll Over Control, blah blah blah. Most, if not all these systems can temporarily abandon the driver, for example, when the brakes are too hot, and the driver should also know how to deal with that possibility, as well as learning how a car with alphabet soup will drive.
Or, in the alternative, you're still driving that oldie but goodie, with none of the above. Again, fully defeatable acronyms can't hurt.