How to Steer When You Have Poor Sense of Direction While Driving?
1 Answers
Steering the wheel requires mastering "three degrees": speed, force, and range. Follow these principles: Straightening Principle: Turn the wheel as much as you need to, and return it the same amount—quick turns require quick returns, slow turns require slow returns. Use the car emblem as a reference to check if the wheel is straight. Safety Principle: At high speeds, react quickly when turning, but keep the adjustments small—fine-tune with one finger or half a finger. Curve Principle: Turn the wheel proportionally to the curve—fast for sharp turns (like right-angle turns), slow for gentle curves (like winding roads). Correction Principle: Early adjustments require fewer and slower corrections; late adjustments need more and faster corrections. Small oversteers can be corrected with minor returns, while understeers require quick compensation.