Snap oversteer
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Snap oversteer is the tendency of mid-engine design cars to spin out of control easily, often catching inexperienced drivers unaware.
[edit] Causes
Snap oversteer is when a vehicle spins dramatically during a turn (usually unexpectedly). This is most common with mid-mounted engine, rear wheel drive (MR) vehicles. Mid-mounted engine vehicles have a much lower rotational inertia than a vehicles with a front mounted or rear mounted engine. The lower rotational inertia of mid-mounted engine vehicles causes the vehicle to spin much faster than a front or rear mounted engine vehicle. Snap oversteer if unexpected can catch the driver off guard when cornering, ultimately leading to loss of control of the vehicle.
Snap oversteer is actually realistically a way of saying when a car oversteers it does so quickly. With the engine in the middle mid-engined cars rotate faster (hence their superior cornering abilities). In the real world an average driver can simply react to changes faster and enjoy more involving driver car interaction.

