Equilibrium. It’s more than just a neat word. It’s the holy grail for a racecar driver.
Brian Vickers lost his car on the first lap of yesterday’s Michigan Sprint Cup Race. Vickers said:
“I was going into Turn 3 and expecting to follow the 48 in there and the 22 jumped inside of us and it just came around,” Vickers said. “I mean I just lost it. I have no idea what happened or why. The car just got really loose into three and I chased it all the way up to the wall. I thought I had it saved and it just came all the way around.”
A racecar driver’s goal is to keep the car exactly at equilibrium. Equilibrium means that all the forces acting on a object equal out.  For example, I’m sitting in a chair at my desk. Gravity pulls me down with a force equal to my weight. The chair pushes up with a force equal to my weight. If you add them up, they equal out. If the chair were to break, it would exert less force on me than gravity and I would accelerate downward.
The chair is actually capable of exerting a much larger force than my weight (which I know because people heavier than me have sat in this chair and it didn’t break.) Most things we use have a safety factor – they’re much stronger, or capable of exerting a greater force, than we will ever need. Â We’re not even close to having to worry about equilibrium.
Racing is the act of keeping the car exactly at equilibrium. I like to think of equilibrium as applied to racecars like this:

With the car perched on the top of an unstable equilibrium like the one diagrammed above, all it takes is a little perturbation and the car moves off the peak position. If the perturbation is small, the driver may be able to recover. But it doesn’t have to be very large – a good wind is more than enough – and the driver is caught in a spin. The side of a racecar presents a huge area for the wind to push on. It’s not surprising that a good wind, hitting at exactly the wrong angle, could spin out even a 3,480 lb racecar – because the racecar is already on the edge of crashing.
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I read about this first in the context of aircraft, but I think it applies here. “The cars have all crashed already; the pieces just haven’t stopped moving yet.” It’s not so much that crashing is the oddity; what’s odd is that they don’t crash *more*.
Last year I talked with a test driver at Chrysler Proving Ground, Chelsea, MI. He’s been driving for more than 20 years. Asked maximum speed he’s driven. A Viper at 198 mph. Said, “Things happen real quickly at 198. I shut it down. He’d agree with your cross-cross-wind effect, as reaction time diminishes rapidly.