DaewooOfDeath wrote:
I was really working on trying to both threshold brake right away and brake as late as possible. Do you think I was overdoing it?
It is far more important to brake to exactly the fastest speed you can make the apex and get back on the power than to brake at the last possible moment. Brake a little earlier and save that exercise for when you can't find anymore time elsewhere.
DaewooOfDeath wrote:
I was also trying to spend a lot of time in trail brake/throttle situations because this is when my car turns the best. Is there a better way than what I was doing?
There is nothing wrong with that approach but...
Be careful of the urge to mash the throttle to minimize the time spent between pedals. It is important to do it quickly, but it is much more important at the limit to do it smoothly and at the right time. The biggest mistake I see students looking for more speed make is to hop from one pedal to the other and upset the car in an effort to never coast. The transition from brake to throttle should be undetectable to the contact patch. Smoooooooth (not slow, smooth) feet. If you are waiting until the last possible hundreth of a second, mashing the brake, turning and then dumping off the brake to hurry back to the throttle you are likely not doing any of the above at the ideal time or in the right proportion.
Focus on driving the correct line, increase the speed gradually and work on being smooth on all the inputs. When I say smooth I am always talking about to the contact patch - not the passenger. If you find that you are fighting the car - you are slowing yourself down. Open the radiuses, use all the road, unwind the wheel ... make the tires happy.