heel-and-toe position on a Civic

Discussion in 'Civic' started by bucky3, Jul 23, 2009.

  1. bucky3

    bucky3 Guest

    I'm trying to learn heel-and-toe downshifting on my 2001 Civic. After
    several attempts at rotating my foot 90 degrees in either direction to
    accomplish this task, I learned that the term is sort of a misnomer,
    and is more like inside of the foot and outside of the foot.
    http://www.edmunds.com/ownership/howto/articles/45792/article.html

    Anyone have a good suggestion for foot position? I've tried doing
    pointing straight up (12 o'clock) and using inner vs outer edges of
    foot, but often, the pedals are too wide for my feet. Is there some
    other optimal position like pointing my toes 2 o'clock or 10 o'clock
    that works better?
     
    bucky3, Jul 23, 2009
    #1
  2. bucky3

    Dillon Pyron Guest

    Correct. It's actually toe & heel. I first learned it effectively at
    Bondurant. It works very well in cars that are actually designed for
    it. I was able to sort of do it in my 96 Civic, but not my wife's 96
    Accord.

    I'm now trying to figure out how to get left foot braking to work in
    my Fit. Looks like it will take MAJOR physical modifications. For
    the critics, I left foot every couple of weeks in my F500 racer, so I
    know exactly what I'm doing.
    --

    - dillon I am not invalid

    "Jimmy, I'm sorry your girlfriend turned out
    to be a cylon."
    -Special Agent Tim McGee, "NCIS"
     
    Dillon Pyron, Jul 23, 2009
    #2
  3. bucky3

    APLer Guest

    If you want to see it done for real, watch the first 20 minutes or so of
    "Grand Prix", the movie with James Garner. All the scenes happen in the
    race at Monaco before the big crash.
     
    APLer, Jul 25, 2009
    #3
  4. bucky3

    bucky3 Guest

    After some experimenting, I found that pointing toes at 10-11 o'clock
    works good for me. Since the brake pedal is actually trapezoidal, that
    allow me to operate the brakes with left side of the ball of the foot,
    then the gas with the right/outer edge of the foot.
     
    bucky3, Jul 29, 2009
    #4
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