What I meant to say is correcting understeer in FWD by braking or slowing down.
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I actually got caught out on that a few times in the wet too in a fwd.
Come around a corner with all the weight to the rear accelerating all of a sudden you lift off (hence the term lift over steer) or brake and the weight will all suddenly transfer back to the front. Results in the rear getting really really light and all of a sudden trying to overtake the front end :) Scary if you are not expecting it! Worse in cars with soft springs prone to weight transfer.
I will say again that a FWD is harder to drive at the limit.
I think I would be inclined to agree with you, only because when they go, they go and you have gotta be quick to catch it.
i believe the opposite.. FWD are easier to drive than RWD at its limits..
if FWD oversteer you jsut gas it some more.. understeer you just back off..
When you have understeer you and your car go head on and smash front on into a tree :D
When you have oversteer your car swings its @ss and tail whips the tree!
So there you have it.
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Trouble is typical person can't break it down and process quick enough to what is actually happening and instinctively hit the anchors when in trouble. :)
I personally find RWD is more predictable at the limits therefore easier.... FWD is easier for average joe to drive briskly.... but more challenging to extract the most from it.