"Ultimate Speed Secrets" is the drivers guide to going faster! Professional race instructor Ross Bentley has raced everything from Indy cars to world sports cars and has the experience to make any racer a more complete driver. With detailed drills and comprehensive instructions, Bentley covers everything you need to know: choosing lines; adapting to different cars, tracks, and racing conditions; setting up controls; and understanding car adjustments and mental preparation. Whether you are racing an Indy car or simply interested in becoming a more complete driver on the street, "Ultimate Speed Secrets" will give you the information you need to succeed!"
Myron Weiner was an American political scientist and renowned scholar on India, South Asia, internal and international migration, ethnic conflict, child labor, democratization, political demography, and the politics and policies of developing countries.
Weiner was born in New York City in 1931. He received a BSS degree from the City College of New York in 1951 and MA and PhD degrees from Princeton University in 1953 and 1955. He taught at Princeton and the University of Chicago before coming to MIT as an associate professor in 1961, where he worked for 38 years before retiring in April 1999.
Professor Weiner served as a consultant to the World Bank, the Agency for International Development, the US State Department, and the U.S. National Security Council. He was elected to the American Philosophical Society, and was a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Council on Foreign Relations, and a past president of the New England Association of Asian Studies. He held visiting appointments at Oxford University's Balliol College, Harvard University, Delhi University, Hebrew University and the University of Paris. Dr. Weiner was chair of the External Research and Advisory Committee of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees from 1996 until his death.
He was the author or editor of 32 scholarly books and numerous peer-reviewed articles. His most recent research involved three projects: child labor and education policy in India and other developing countries; comparing immigration, refugees and citizenship policies in Japan, Germany, South Africa and the USA; and analyzing the causes and effects of migration and refugee flows.
Prof. Weiner died of brain cancer on June 3, 1999, at his home in Moretown, VT, at age 68. He was married to Sheila Leiman Weiner. They had two children, Saul Weiner of Chicago and a daughter, Beth Weiner Datskovsky, of Bala Cynwyd, PA.
Really great, super detailed guide to race driving. There was a fair amount of fluff and some repetitive information, but for the most part this is just page after page of valuable information. There are also plenty of visuals. I'd recommend this to any racer at any level.
Excellent. Certainly a must read for anybody who has ever even considered driving a car on a track. I would call it a must read for anyone who is a serious fan of auto racing and wants a deeper appreciation of what drivers are up to at any given moment during a race. This book is meant to replace several of Bentley's previous books by consolidating their content into a single tome. It is quite thorough. The material is accessible while never being dumbed down. The discussions of weight balance and traction are worth the price of the book alone. Even the portions on mental preparation and attitude are surprisingly good (Bentley gets bonus points for quoting a favorite of mine, Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind). I know that this book, and those from the Skip Barber school, are considered to be the best on the subject, but I still underestimated how much this was going to enrich my understanding of the dynamics of an automobile (I should really say that I overestimated my understanding of it prior to reading the book). It makes you wish there was an F1 race on the TV every time you put the book down.
I started in this 1,5 years ago. Picked it up recently to start over and finished it in about a week. If racing or driving fast at all is your passion, this is a great book to read. Great insights, valuable tips, some methods to work with and besides that a very interesting read with some nice stories to support his theories.
More suitable for racers who don't enjoy reading. Explanations are concise without missing much. Many chapters only took a page. I love the unexpected tips you never thought of such as adjusting your wing mirror. And it comes with colorful illustrations which is a nice bonus.
Great resource for learning the fundamentals of racing, but it's brought down by some dubious psychology and neurobiology. For example, he talks about learning styles, something which has been largely discredited for awhile now. He also talks about being able to improve your "left and right brain integration" and thus your racing ability by doing unrelated cross-hemisphere exercise, which as far as I can tell has little evidence to support it.
Complete guide to getting faster in a track or race car. Many tips that would make one safer at the legal speed limit in the highway. The author’s promise and follow through on repeating important points throughout the text is helpful. Tons of practical, how to advice to make one faster. A surprising amount of mental techniques and exercises are discussed. Examples provided of many well known professional drivers who are mentioned by name.
This book is THE resource for race drivers. There is a wealth of practical knowledge and you can't digest it all in one sitting; you keep going back to it as a reference.
This book is a mixed bag. On the one hand it has several excellent chapters on how to improve your driving, what it takes to be a racing car driver, how to build a team, etc.
On the other hand, Bentley espouses some questionable theories about learning and how the brain works. I found myself skimming and skipping some parts of the book because of that. There are also some pretty basic grammatical and spelling errors in the book that take away from the impact of the writing.
If you can overlook the significant flaws of this book it is a great read if you're interested in becoming a better driver.
Fantastic book if you are serious about simracing. The techniques explained are really helpful and it is very simple to read. It does get repetitive sometimes but that's good because you keep reviewing stuff you may have forgotten. On a second read it does get boring tho.
There are some sections of the book about the mental part of racing explaining things like "mental imagery" and such. I did not practice these so I can't comment on them.
Very interesting read. Lot to take from it even if you don’t drive. Principals of racing can be applied to any discipline but if you play Dirt Rally or the F1 games it makes it a lot more fun to read.
Good technical read on driving techniques. Not an easy read. This is potentially something I could come back to or get people to read to build a better licensing system.