How to Heel / Toe

     Here's the scoop, as presented in classroom sessions and in-car instruction that I do, and based on running a lot of different cars in a lot of different racing, time-trialing, and driver's school situations -- you can also find good info on this technique in Pierro Taruffi's book, The Technique of Motor Racing, or Henry Watts' book Secrets of Solo Racing.

     Ball of foot on brake, punch gas pedal with heel or with side of foot. Ball of foot on brake because you need the sensitivity of the masses of nerve endings in the ball of your foot to be able to precisely modulate pressure under bet-I-can-outbrake-you-for-this-corner situations. You blip throttle with heel because precision is less important for this function. Ability to do this varies with cars; Audis were great until the unintended acceleration scams caused them to widen the pedal gap to Japanese car distances. Porsche's and BMWs are probably the easiest to do now, although I have to hit the throttle with the side of my foot (wear out a set of racing shoes every year right around the Simpson label...)

     Japanese designed cars (like the Mitsubishi Eclipse and the Diamond-Star variants, or the Acura and Honda, etc), many of which have the pedals too far apart for anyone with less than a size 12 foot, or without the ability to rotate their right leg perfectly sideways under big deceleration Gs (if I can learn to do it, so can you, but it took me practice and yoga to get it right) you can reverse the heel and toe position, putting heel on brake and toe on throttle. It costs you a lot in outbraking situations (why I learned the contortionist routine) unless you have ABS. I teach it if I have students who can't get the rotation in their leg that they need.

     Heel and toe used to be done with heel on throttle and toe on accelerator all of the time in the old days (see Taruffi) for a very simple reason. Many race cars of those days had the gas pedal in the middle, brake on the right. Not a popular layout any more.

     Double-clutching is a lost art, pretty much replaced by heel and toe and modern technology. Synchros have obviated the need except when your gearbox is going on you, or in some of the formula cars. I wonder if I'll have to teach heel and toe ten years from now when the Tiptronic buttons-on-steering-wheel have taken over.

Technical Info

©2005 Copyright www.LotusElan.com

Disclaimer / Privacy Policy