Go ahead, Yonco, tell them: the lying-down cones are directional indicators ...
Your counselor Rodeo Flyer has a good grip on where to go and how. Technique and car control can be learned in any vehicle, it just becomes easier with the appropriate mods. If your local magazine store has
Grassroots Motorsports look for an issue with a blue Subaricer on the cover. They give the car a 10-points improvement course for handling, and show which of the usual mods has most effect on autocross lap times.
There are equipment and technique methods for getting the front end to answer your instructions and not push away from the apex of turns. More roll-stiffness in the opposite end of the car (
c.f. Rodeo Flyer) and pitch-and-catch both work, but the former is quicker and less, uh, exciting.
For anyone in Southern California who is interested in a bit of practice time, SCNAX is offering three days (3 days!) of practice in the San Diego Stadium (Qualcomm) parking lot, 1, 2 and 3 September:
http://www.sdr-scca.com/solo2/schedu...nax-090107.pdf
Groups are about half full as of yesterday. Courses on this big lot are usually 60-80 second laps, top speeds in the 70s, my experience. Last practice I ran, I did 12 runs in an hour and a half. Learned something about brake fade, I did. You can get the SDR card and car number on the morning of the event, if you register by mail beforehand, or a "day pass" for $10 if the $30 SCCA "membership" isn't appealing to you. Enter "TBD" in the Card No. space.
My own setup is very nice, yields a predictable, controllable turning experience, potentially very fast in the right hands:
GT front bar, H&R 26mm rear, BMR strut brace, Tokico D-spec struts/shocks, Steeda Sport springs, GT 17x8 Bullitts with original tall-tread Pirelli PZero Neros. On these tires you can go skating around pretty good, feeling the dynamics in kind of slow motion. Someone has suggested the Bridgestone racy (R001?) tires as a pretty good performer and relatively inexpensive next step.
Any road, it is a real treat to do autocross, and a giant pleasure and an excellent accomplishment to do it right and do it well. Can take some time and effort, though.
Welcome to the twisty side.