{"version":"1.0.0","episode":{"title":"Louis Foster & RHR","url":"http://getcarcurious.com/episodes/louis-foster-rhr","audioUrl":"https://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/sxm.simplecastaudio.com/c4975f47-4d85-4129-b692-8d3784e110bd/episodes/61a4e032-1b37-4702-8eb4-fb1ec710e7a0/audio/128/default.mp3?aid=rss_feed&awCollectionId=c4975f47-4d85-4129-b692-8d3784e110bd&awEpisodeId=61a4e032-1b37-4702-8eb4-fb1ec710e7a0&feed=qaiDidW0","description":"A bit out of order this week. This episode is a recording of a live chat we hosted in a Tower Terrace suite on Monday with RHR and Louis Foster.\n+++&nbsp;\nOff Track is part of the SiriusXM Sports Podcast Network. If you enjoyed this episode and want to hear more, please give a 5-star rating and leave a review. Subscribe today wherever you stream your podcasts.\nWant some Off Track swag? Check out our store!\nCheck out our website, www.askofftrack.com\nSubscribe to our YouTube Channel.\nWant some advice? Send your questions in for Ask Alex to AskOffTrack@gmail.com\nFollow us on Twitter at @askofftrack. Or individually at @Hinchtown, @AlexanderRossi, and @TheTimDurham. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising."},"annotations":[{"startTime":1000.72,"endTime":1006.36,"type":"car","title":"Seagull","url":"/cars/byd/seagull","image":"https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b4/BYD_Seagull_001.jpg","quote":"...c mix of teammates Yeah, yeah battle war no one's seagull and christian one guard in numerical order. Um Wh...","canonicalId":"car:seagull:","priority":0.5,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Seagull” isn’t a specific, widely recognized car model name on its own, so the podcast reference is likely shorthand for a particular vehicle or nickname used in the episode. It may be discussed as part of a team or driver “battle” context, but without more detail it’s not possible to identify the exact make/model being referenced. If you can share the surrounding sentence where “Seagull” appears, I can pin down the exact car.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Seagull” doesn’t clearly point to one specific car you can look up by name. It may be a nickname for a particular vehicle mentioned in the podcast. If you share a bit more of the quote, I can explain what that “Seagull” actually refers to.","imageAttribution":"JustAnotherCarDesigner (CC BY-SA 4.0)"}},{"startTime":1080.8,"endTime":1090.3,"type":"term","title":"threshold or tolerance","quote":"Probably more along the lines of like what you're used to seeing with with they have a very large\n[1086.8s] threshold or or tolerance for dealing with um\n[1090.3s] A lot of rear moments, right a lot","canonicalId":"term:threshold-or-tolerance","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.6,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In driving terms, a “threshold” or “tolerance” describes how much instability (like rear rotation) a driver can handle before the car becomes too difficult to control. It’s closely tied to setup and driving style—some drivers can work right at the edge, while others prefer a wider safety margin.","simplifiedExplanation":"This is basically how close a driver is willing to push the car to the point where it starts to get hard to control. Different drivers have different comfort levels for that “edge.”"}},{"startTime":1086.8,"endTime":1096.8,"type":"term","title":"rear moments","quote":"Probably more along the lines of like what you're used to seeing with with they have a very large threshold or or tolerance for dealing with um\n[1090.3s] A lot of rear moments, right a lot","canonicalId":"term:rear-moments","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.62,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Rear moments” refers to how the car’s rear end behaves dynamically—especially when it starts to rotate or step out during braking, turning, or throttle changes. Drivers and engineers often talk about managing rear “moment” by tuning balance so the car stays predictable instead of snapping into oversteer.","simplifiedExplanation":"It means the back of the car is getting “rotation” or “wiggle” during driving. Good setups help the rear stay controllable so the car doesn’t suddenly spin or slide."}},{"startTime":1102.0,"endTime":1103.84,"type":"term","title":"gray area","url":"/glossary/gray-area","quote":"I've always thought there's there's right. That's a gray area in between, you know\n[1102.0s] Those that are very conservative","canonicalId":"term:gray-area","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.55,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The “gray area” is the zone between fully stable handling and the point where the car becomes noticeably unstable. In performance driving, that boundary is where small changes in throttle, steering, or braking can cause big changes in rear behavior."}}],"speakers":[{"id":"s1","name":"SiriusXM","role":"host"}],"transcripts":[{"url":"http://getcarcurious.com/episodes/louis-foster-rhr/transcript.vtt","type":"text/vtt"}]}