Robb Gravett Driving Course
Ollie Stallwood heads off to meet ex-BTCC champion Rob Gravett to see if he can improve his skills behind the wheel...

A lot of people think they can drive well. Most would also believe they would know what to do in an emergency situation, when everything starts to go wrong. But as I found out one cold Friday afternoon it is when you are metres away from a wall of cones and travelling at 50 mph in a Mercedes E-Class that you realise perhaps you don’t know it all. So how did I find myself in this situation? I had booked myself in to a driving course at the Transport Research Laboratory in Crowthorne to brush up on my skills behind the wheel. The course in question is the Ultimate Car Control Driving Dynamics Day, run by ex-BTCC champion Robb Gravett.
It was an early start and after some much needed coffee I joined the group of around ten students in a small hut at the side of a large area of deserted tarmac. Gravett then started going through the basics of what happens to a car’s weight when it goes in to a corner. Simple enough stuff, but crucial all the same as it explains where the grip will and won’t be when you turn into a corner. Gravett explains that by having a greater understanding of the effects of braking, accelerating, understeer and roll-oversteer we will be able to change direction even in the most difficult and challenging situations. He says his approach to driving and car control is unique and he claims some people have told him it has saved their life.
He also has different theories on the safest line to take in a corner, which he explains throughout the course. Then it is time to head out for a go ourselves. The course is sponsored by Mercedes and there is an impressive selection of cars, including a few CLK’s, a B-Class SLK, a C-Class Sports Coupe and the E-Class, giving us a feel for both front and rear drive, auto and manual. The cars, I’m told, go through a new set of tyres and brake pads every week.
Gravett says which wheels drive the car matters little as the technique he teaches applies to all cars. For the next couple of hours we spend our time driving quickly through a series of cones, each time with a dedicated tutor sitting alongside. The idea of the exercise is to reach the end of the cones at high speed then turn 180 degrees as tightly as possible, without understeering or oversteering. By balancing the car correctly with the brake and throttle this can be done safely and efficiently, and with a suprisingly small turning circle, says Gravett.
After practicing the technique a few times I was starting to feel confident that I was mastering Gravett’s special technique. It was shortly after this that I found myself in the E-Class – one of the hardest cars to drive quickly due to its bulk – nudging 50 mph, heading for a cone chicane, and
waiting for the instructor to instruct me to do something. After the point when I thought it inevitable I would hit the cones he shouted for me to brake and use the technique to get around the obstacle without losing control of the car. Somehow I made it round the cones safely, which were designed to simulate a stationary lorry on a motorway, amazed the car actually got me to the other side. This, the instructor told me, was down to what I had learnt throughout the day and would hopefully become instinctive on the road.It was now time for lunch and I ate from the buffet efficiently and instinctively as well, confident in the fact I was starting to get the technique. I also had a chance to quiz Gravett as to what it all meant. ‘The ethos behind the day is safety,’ he tells me. ‘This course gives the individual an awareness you can’t get anywhere else in the world and it makes you a massively better driver. It becomes a subliminal reactive process – if you have to think it’s too late. Once you have control and awareness you can extend that to going fast on track days.’
After lunch a track was laid out in cones and we were treated to a ride out with Gravett, where he showed us what we should and shouldn’t do. Then it was our turn to try the new
techniques on the track, using a different line to extend your braking time. I had to agree that the technique may well be safer but whether it was ultimately a quicker way around the circuit, I wasn’t convinced. Without trying a number of different ways to go round the same corner, using a stop-watch it was difficult to tell. What Gravett teaches does seem unique and slightly unorthodox. However, the course does put you in an emergency situation, where you have to think fast to avoid a big accident, and allows you to find out in safety how you would react. Unlike in real-life you then get a few more goes to work out how you would deal with the situation, which of course is very useful. The team know their stuff and the tuition is virtually one-to-one. So if you want to find out how you would react in an emergency situation it may be worth a look. If anything you might get to find out what you don't know rather than what you do know about driving.so Rob Gravett has discovered a whole new technique?
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Developed it while he was winning the British Saloon Car Championship, apparently. Also says that McLaren sent a rep along to the course and, as a result, they set about a re-design of their car to help incorporate his method in the driving of LH etc.
That said I'm sure it's good fun and a great idea for those of us who enjoy spirited driving or go on track - although you couldn't prove if it was quicker or not - which for track driving is surely the whole point.
However, emergency evasive driver training is part of the inner layer of defensive driving. Without it, you will be vulnerable no matter how systematic your driving is.
Hazard perception and driving to a system are important, but they can fail as long as the driver is not perfect (and no driver is perfect). There is also a limit on how one can control and compensate for errors of other drivers.
When things don't go to plan, when the unexpected happens, your training in emergency evasive techniques will be your only defence.
Advanced car control is not necessarily the same as emergency evasive driving or collision avoidance. The latter two are concerned with proper actions to take when an emergency does occur, not just car control.
Some skills to consider are:
- High-speed lane changes: can you change to a safe lane quickly and safely if a vehicle/animal/pedestrian/cyclist/cargo suddenly swerves/falls into your lane? I've had this sort of situation happen a few times in the past several years (one was a sleeping van driver, another was a poorly secured furniture, and more).
- Brake-and-swerve: can you perform emergency braking and swerving manoeuvres on straight roads? How about braking and swerving simultaneously, for situations on twisty roads? Happens more often than you might think if you live in the country-side (animals darting across roads were a plague where I used to live).
- Aquaplaning: do you react and/or recover appropriately to/from aquaplaning?
- Black ice: do you react and/or recover appropriately to/from black ice? How about black ice affecting traction on one side of the car but not the other? How about black ice affecting only driving and/or steering wheels, causing over/under-steer instead of neutral skid?
- Secondary collisions: so you have saved yourself in an emergency, but do you recover from this appropriately? Have you made yourself a hazard to other drivers or pedestrians, AFTER a near-miss (one of my friends managed to avoid a tail-ender, only to have someone else skid into her).

So your are telling me some McL middle manager when back to the factory and sat Lewis down to give him to tips on driving?

If I understood correctly, Rob Gravett claims that trail braking is not required - it's all brake, release, steer and no combination of braking and steering is to be undertaken - it's one or the other.
I found it very useful and do see what he is advocating. It's a useful kneejerk reaction to learn. I'm still in two minds about whether it's the fastest way to get around a corner on a racetrack, but I found it a useful experience and improved my confidence in cornering.
I went on to do the CarLimits.com course - that takes it a step further with trail braking etc. Interesting to get the different views on what's quickest/what's required.

I did the course a couple of years ago, and while I'm not convinced it is the only/fastest way to drive quickly, it was useful and even though I'd done other advanced driving courses and have a fair bit of track day and race experience, I still found it worth doing.
Although the Gravett course looks interesting and fun, I often wonder whether its a good idea to mix too many techniques together.
I'd go to another Carlimits course before trying another type as I think its possibly dangerous to combine various driving styles. If you need these skills in a dangerous situation, surely it would be better to only have one 'instinct' installed in your brain than having contradicting techniques ?
Car makers know this and design their cars to get people out of trouble as much as possible.
I'd also suspect that most people who sign up for a course like this and actively want to improve their driving skills are not generally the ones who need it the most.
I myself learned a lot from this sort of training although I am not so sure how deeply engrained the learned actions and reactions really are after a day or two.
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