Quote:
Originally Posted by tttomttt
Just curious if the car sickness is related to highway driving or all driving. I have been in cars with other people driving and when they reach the highway they tend to constantly move the wheel back and forth creating a subtle weave left and right. This slight weaving causes the passengers to feel nauseous. This movement can be eliminated by the driver casting his gaze further down the center of the lane thus eliminating the weaving. Works like a charm. Most often the driver is unaware of themselves weaving at all.
|
I leaned a trick road racers use: to hold your knee firmly against the steering wheel through curves to absolutely eliminate the wiggle.
100% of drivers I've monitored will wiggle their way through a 270° off ramp with typically 20 to 30 steering inputs.
I find a line, hold the wheel with my left knee so it doesn't move when I hit a bump. For offramps that I frequently use I already know the line I steer onto the line and 270° later I let the car auto straighten, loosen up the knee to still make that a smooth lateral g transition.
Get a g-force app and practice until you get a non jiggly line. I've had numerous people comment that in spite of the near 1g turns (back in z28 days) that my turns are smooth and don't make the passenger nauseous.