Handbrake Turns Guide

Most FH6 players never bother learning handbrake turns. And that's exactly why you should. It's one of those skills that separates people who wonder why they keep getting gapped from the people doing the gapping. Once it's in your muscle memory, you won't think about it — but you'll be faster everywhere.

What Handbrake Turns Actually Is

Handbrake Turns is a beginner technique involving using the handbrake for tight hairpin rotation. The basic idea is simple, but executing it consistently under race pressure is where most people fall apart.

Handbrake Turns — Quick Reference
AspectDetail
DifficultyBeginner
Primary BenefitHairpin Speed
Controller vs WheelEasier on wheel with pedal control. Controller: remap clutch to A button
Required SetupManual transmission only — won't work with auto or semi-auto
When to UseEvery corner entry, especially medium and tight corners
Common MistakeRushing the inputs — smooth beats fast every time

Step-by-Step

  1. Approach the corner normally. Brake in a straight line as usual. The technique happens during braking, not before it.
  2. Prepare the downshift while braking. This is where the coordination happens. Your feet are doing two different things at once — it takes practice.
  3. Execute the technique. One fluid motion. If you do it right, the car stays settled and ready to rotate.
  4. Release brake, turn in, back on throttle. Because the car is settled, you can carry more entry speed.
  5. Practice on a familiar track first. I use the Horizon Mexico circuit. Run laps focusing ONLY on this technique, ignore lap times.

When NOT to Use It

handbrake turns is great but not always the answer. In slow hairpins dropping 2-3 gears, it gets tricky. In some AWD cars with aggressive diffs, the car basically drives itself and the technique adds complexity without benefit. Know when to use it and when to keep it simple.

Practice Drill

Horizon Mexico circuit. 5 laps focusing ONLY on this technique — no lap time pressure. Then 3 laps at race pace. My times dropped 0.3-0.5 seconds per lap after about an hour of practice. Over a 5-lap race that's 2-3 seconds — P1 vs P5 in a tight lobby.