The graphs to the right show the simulated effect of lifting off the throttle in the middle of a left turn. The transients in the first couple of seconds are due to the test, in which a step steer input (wheel angle) is applied at 0 s and held constant throughout. The steady state cornering is at constant speed, with a lateral acceleration of 0.45 g approximately until the throttle is released at 6 s. The
yaw rate plot shows the oversteer due to the rear wheels losing traction - after an uncomfortable jerk at 20 deg/s, the vehicle spins sharply in the direction of the turn. The lateral acceleration also spikes to 0.6 g and levels at about 0.55 g, meaning that the radius decreased (i.e., the turn tightened). The side forces on the outside wheels increase and the inside rear (LR) wheel even lifts off the ground, a common occurrence. Lift off oversteer is induced when the
throttle is lifted while midway through a corner, often by inexperienced drivers who have entered the corner at an excessive speed.
Moment of inertia Lift off
oversteer is most common with
mid-mounted engine,
rear-wheel-drive (MR) vehicles. Mid-mounted engine vehicles have a much lower
rotational inertia than vehicles with a front-mounted or rear-mounted engine. The lower rotational
inertia of mid-mounted engine vehicles causes the vehicle to spin much faster than a front or rear mounted engine vehicle. If unexpected, it can catch the driver off guard when cornering, ultimately leading to loss of control of the vehicle. ==Recovery==