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词汇 oversteer
释义

Definition of oversteer in English:

oversteer

verb ˈəʊvəstɪəˌoʊvərˈstɪr
[no object]
  • (of a motor vehicle) have a tendency to turn more sharply than intended.

    (机动车)过度转向

    it was very difficult to drive when the car was oversteering
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The second set of tyres was okay, but with the first and third set, my A4 was oversteering.
    • It tended to oversteer and it shimmied like mad on descents.
    • Project Gotham Racing: Looks fantastic, oversteering takes a bit of getting used to, the detail of say Leicester Square is close to photo realistic, most fun in multi-player mode with loads of nice touches.
    • But straight away this afternoon it was oversteering.
    • However, it may be worth noting that a vehicle steered by its front wheels is less likely to oversteer if its centre of mass is well forward, so that most of the weight of the body is carried by the front wheels.
    • We kept the same set of tyres on for part of this afternoon's session, and by then the car was really oversteering, so as we put on a new set of tyres we also adjusted the set-up to make the handling more neutral.
    • But for sure we lost too much in the first two corners, the car was a little bit oversteering, it was quite windy and I think there was some grass also on the track, so I think it was not perfect conditions for my lap in the first two corners.
    • ‘The first practice was real difficult because the track didn't have enough grip, and we had a lot of problems with oversteering and traction problems.
    • His driving style has also matured, to the point where he now likes his car set up so that it responds immediately to steering inputs and tends to oversteer, or slide its back end.
    • If a car's rear tyres start to wear more than its fronts, it will begin to oversteer and the driver needs to be much more sensitive with the throttle - especially when exiting slow corners.
    • EVO recently tested the car and said on one occasion it understeered, during the other it oversteered.
    • At speed, this reduces to concerns about whether the car drives too ‘tight’ or too ‘loose’ - tight meaning it is hard to turn, it understeers, and loose meaning it turns too much, it oversteers.
    • Due to the resulting lack of downforce my car started to oversteer a bit.
    • This was a car that understeered badly every time I went round one particular corner, and then - for no reason at all - would suddenly decide to oversteer.
    • The race was going to plan until the last stint, when the car had less traction and was oversteering a lot.
    • Practicing yesterday, I think we were running in front of people and the car was kind of oversteering.
    • This car in particular seemed to oversteer very badly.
noun ˈəʊvəstɪəˈoʊvərˌstɪr
mass noun
  • The tendency of a vehicle to turn more sharply than intended.

    (机动车)过度转向

    straightforward handling which gives just a hint of oversteer
    Example sentencesExamples
    • My qualifying performance wasn't perfect as I had a short moment when I slid a little too much at the second to last corner due to oversteer.
    • Understeer is present in the dry, countered by progressive oversteer with right foot tickling.
    • On my first set of tyres I had some understeer and that switched to oversteer with my second set which slowed me a bit.
    • The car can be driven on the throttle quite easily, with both understeer and oversteer smoothly quelled by your right foot.
    • Regarding the handling, Michael says that the S1's chassis is so well balanced and sensitive that adjusting the dampers just one click from standard front or rear can switch it to understeer or oversteer.
    • Not a hint of understeer or oversteer could I find at my modest speeds.
    • It was a fine demonstration that taking a car by the scruff of the neck doesn't have to mean ten minutes of lurching, understeer and oversteer.
    • The cars are configured for mild understeer, although you can turn that into oversteer quite easily if you twitch your toe in the middle of a corner.
    • I lost almost a second of time due to oversteer at the entry of turn eight on my qualifying lap and that has resulted in only 11th place heading into tomorrow's decisive session.
    • With the extra weight all concentrated over the front wheels, there is a slight tendency towards oversteer.
    • Jaguar's promotional video made it obvious that with the stability systems switched off the car is well up for some serious, tail-out, tyre-smoking power oversteer.
    • This is an active safety feature designed to help prevent accidents by registering and helping to correct oversteer, understeer and loss of stability in the vehicle.
    • However, it also can add lift-throttle oversteer to the mix.
    • The analogue sticks felt a little light for my liking - there wasn't too much resistance in the movement, making it a little prone to oversteer.
    • After the diffuser was damaged, the balance was very unpredictable, switching from oversteer to understeer even in the course of a lap, and I kept asking to change it in the pits.
    • When oversteer is present, the outside front wheel is decelerated to pull the nose outward slightly to keep the rear from overtaking the front.
    • In fact the only times I ever got understeer were when trying to induce power oversteer, which of course effectively means using too much throttle for the turn.
    • No matter what I did, it stayed very composed, pushing into understeer rather than oversteer.
    • Neither car is particularly well balanced at this stage, but in Malaysia, we always need to tune the car set-up in order to counteract the fact that in high temperatures, the cars are inherently more prone to oversteer.
    • This system uses all the features of the ESP but adds electric steering control to prevent oversteer and understeer as well as correct steering errors.

Definition of oversteer in US English:

oversteer

verbˌoʊvərˈstɪrˌōvərˈstir
[no object]
  • (of a motor vehicle) have a tendency to turn more sharply than was intended.

    (机动车)过度转向

    it was very difficult to drive when the car was oversteering
    Example sentencesExamples
    • This was a car that understeered badly every time I went round one particular corner, and then - for no reason at all - would suddenly decide to oversteer.
    • Practicing yesterday, I think we were running in front of people and the car was kind of oversteering.
    • If a car's rear tyres start to wear more than its fronts, it will begin to oversteer and the driver needs to be much more sensitive with the throttle - especially when exiting slow corners.
    • His driving style has also matured, to the point where he now likes his car set up so that it responds immediately to steering inputs and tends to oversteer, or slide its back end.
    • At speed, this reduces to concerns about whether the car drives too ‘tight’ or too ‘loose’ - tight meaning it is hard to turn, it understeers, and loose meaning it turns too much, it oversteers.
    • The second set of tyres was okay, but with the first and third set, my A4 was oversteering.
    • Project Gotham Racing: Looks fantastic, oversteering takes a bit of getting used to, the detail of say Leicester Square is close to photo realistic, most fun in multi-player mode with loads of nice touches.
    • We kept the same set of tyres on for part of this afternoon's session, and by then the car was really oversteering, so as we put on a new set of tyres we also adjusted the set-up to make the handling more neutral.
    • The race was going to plan until the last stint, when the car had less traction and was oversteering a lot.
    • EVO recently tested the car and said on one occasion it understeered, during the other it oversteered.
    • However, it may be worth noting that a vehicle steered by its front wheels is less likely to oversteer if its centre of mass is well forward, so that most of the weight of the body is carried by the front wheels.
    • This car in particular seemed to oversteer very badly.
    • It tended to oversteer and it shimmied like mad on descents.
    • But straight away this afternoon it was oversteering.
    • Due to the resulting lack of downforce my car started to oversteer a bit.
    • But for sure we lost too much in the first two corners, the car was a little bit oversteering, it was quite windy and I think there was some grass also on the track, so I think it was not perfect conditions for my lap in the first two corners.
    • ‘The first practice was real difficult because the track didn't have enough grip, and we had a lot of problems with oversteering and traction problems.
nounˈōvərˌstirˈoʊvərˌstɪr
  • The tendency of a vehicle to turn more sharply than intended.

    (机动车)过度转向

    straightforward handling which gives just a hint of oversteer
    Example sentencesExamples
    • My qualifying performance wasn't perfect as I had a short moment when I slid a little too much at the second to last corner due to oversteer.
    • Neither car is particularly well balanced at this stage, but in Malaysia, we always need to tune the car set-up in order to counteract the fact that in high temperatures, the cars are inherently more prone to oversteer.
    • It was a fine demonstration that taking a car by the scruff of the neck doesn't have to mean ten minutes of lurching, understeer and oversteer.
    • I lost almost a second of time due to oversteer at the entry of turn eight on my qualifying lap and that has resulted in only 11th place heading into tomorrow's decisive session.
    • The cars are configured for mild understeer, although you can turn that into oversteer quite easily if you twitch your toe in the middle of a corner.
    • No matter what I did, it stayed very composed, pushing into understeer rather than oversteer.
    • Not a hint of understeer or oversteer could I find at my modest speeds.
    • The car can be driven on the throttle quite easily, with both understeer and oversteer smoothly quelled by your right foot.
    • The analogue sticks felt a little light for my liking - there wasn't too much resistance in the movement, making it a little prone to oversteer.
    • This is an active safety feature designed to help prevent accidents by registering and helping to correct oversteer, understeer and loss of stability in the vehicle.
    • After the diffuser was damaged, the balance was very unpredictable, switching from oversteer to understeer even in the course of a lap, and I kept asking to change it in the pits.
    • When oversteer is present, the outside front wheel is decelerated to pull the nose outward slightly to keep the rear from overtaking the front.
    • Jaguar's promotional video made it obvious that with the stability systems switched off the car is well up for some serious, tail-out, tyre-smoking power oversteer.
    • Regarding the handling, Michael says that the S1's chassis is so well balanced and sensitive that adjusting the dampers just one click from standard front or rear can switch it to understeer or oversteer.
    • However, it also can add lift-throttle oversteer to the mix.
    • This system uses all the features of the ESP but adds electric steering control to prevent oversteer and understeer as well as correct steering errors.
    • On my first set of tyres I had some understeer and that switched to oversteer with my second set which slowed me a bit.
    • In fact the only times I ever got understeer were when trying to induce power oversteer, which of course effectively means using too much throttle for the turn.
    • Understeer is present in the dry, countered by progressive oversteer with right foot tickling.
    • With the extra weight all concentrated over the front wheels, there is a slight tendency towards oversteer.
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