Poging GOUD - Vrij
LEARNING TO FLY COMING DOWN IS THE HARDEST THING.
Road & Track
|June - July 2025
SEPARATING A CAR from the ground is simple physics. Drive over an incline at a high-enough velocity, and momentum will briefly relieve your tires of their primary function. The higher the velocity or ramp angle, the higher or longer the flight.

Jumping is easy. The trick is landing. Doing so successfully requires technique, planning, and, depending on the length and duration of your flight, possibly some math.
Understanding the hands-on application of that math lesson is why I’m at Rally Ready Driving School in Dale, Texas, outside Austin. Here, ribbons of perfect gravel trails snake through pastures and forest.
I’ve shown up in a 2025 Ford Ranger Raptor, featuring a reinforced frame and suspension with adaptive Fox shocks that make it better suited to aeronautic excursions than a standard Ranger. My instructor is Rally Ready owner Dave Carapetyan, three-time winner of the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb Open division. He also won the 2019 Baja 500 Trophy Truck Spec class. He knows his stuff.
He explains that jumping a car is similar to jumping a bicycle: You want to take off with the weight at the back to avoid the “donkey kick,” where the back wheels are pushed upward just as the nose of the car starts to fall back to earth. “If you’re in a race and don’t know what's on the other side of a jump, it’s better to keep the nose up and have the rear wheels touch down first,” he says. To do that, tap the brake just before the ramp at the transition upward from level ground to send the weight to the front, then hit the gas to shift the weight to the rear as you climb the ramp and take flight—it’s a sort of Scandinavian flick on the x-axis. Then land with your foot off the gas to prevent shocking the drivetrain.
Carapetyan demonstrates. The nose of the Ford rises abruptly. We leave the surface of the earth, fly 40 feet down the trail, and touch down with a fairly comfortable gah-lump. The truck seems unimpressed. Surprisingly, I feel calm too.
Dit verhaal komt uit de June - July 2025-editie van Road & Track.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN Road & Track

Road & Track
Running Long
Unconventional ways to turn racing into a whole-day affair.
8 mins
October - November 2025

Road & Track
THE SILENT KILLER
FERRARI'S LATEST HYPERCAR SPEAKS SOFTLY AND CARRIES A MASSIVE STICK
8 mins
October - November 2025

Road & Track
ENDURING RACING FOR A RACE-CAR DRIVER, THE GREATEST PROFESSIONAL FEAT IS PERSEVERING LONG ENOUGH TO CALL IT A PROFESSION.
A COMMON SENTIMENT IN MOTORSPORT IS THAT A DRIVER NEEDS TO BE 80 PERCENT BUSINESSPERSON AND 20 PERCENT RACER. FOR THE FIRST TIME IN YOUR LIFE, YOU REALIZE IT'S TRUE.
4 mins
October - November 2025

Road & Track
LONG-WINDED EXTENDED-RESERVE WATCHES OFFER LUXURIOUS RUN TIMES.
ENDURANCE APPLIES TO watches in many ways.
3 mins
October - November 2025

Road & Track
PARTY CRASHER
That Duncan Hamilton even made it to the 1953 running of the 24 Hours of Le Mans is a testament to his durability. A lifelong theme of surviving calamity started with rolling his own stroller down some stairs at age two and continued with a series of shipwrecks, car rollovers, and plane crashes. Still, he became a formidable racer and landed a spot on the Jaguar factory team.
1 min
October - November 2025

Road & Track
LASTING APPEAL
VINTAGE CHARM AND MODERN POWER IN THE MORGAN PLUS FOUR.
6 mins
October - November 2025

Road & Track
THE BLUEPRINT
TOYOTA'S 2JZ INLINE-SIX IS KNOWN FOR ITS LEGENDARY DURABILITY.
4 mins
October - November 2025

Road & Track
BORN SLIPPY
OLDSMOBILE STREAMLINED AEROTECH ENDURANCE RECORDS THAT STILL STAND TODAY.
7 mins
October - November 2025

Road & Track
THE 72 HOURS OF EUROPE
WHAT DOES COMPETING IN THREE 24-HOUR RACES ON THREE CONSECUTIVE WEEKENDS DO TO A DRIVER? WE HAVE THE DATA.
4 mins
October - November 2025

Road & Track
BREAKNECK SPEED
TO AID IN F1 STRENGTH TRAINING, A THERAPIST HAS INNOVATED A SAFER WAY TO REMAIN HEAD STRONG.
2 mins
October - November 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size