he guys stop with the car talk with all do respect none of you know what you are talking about and cars to skiing is usually not applicable.
I raced autocross very successfully from 2000 - 2006, mixed with Rally racing(dirt/pavement/snow/ice), go kart racing(5 hpspec karts to 35 HP shifter monsters that go 0-100 in less than 6 seconds), Road Racing in productions cars. SCCA ITB and NASA Honda Challenge, as well as stints in some moderately powered Open wheel wing cars like Fomula Atlantics.
The fastest way to drive on ice/snow which is not really the safest is to use the cars power to pull it though the turn. Trying to get a car to grip on ice is way slower than throwing the rear end out and using the throttle to pull back on to intended line. You steer into the turn and then you counter steer as the tail comes out.
On pavement all cars driven by skilled fast driver will always oversteer at least slightly at the limit for the same reason. Loose is fast, tight is slow(but safe). In my own car they were set up to be so unstable that simply lifting off the gas would cause the car to rotate untill you slammed back down on the throttle. The advantage of a FWD car with gobs of power to weight is that you can get the car to oversteer and basically hang the car on the front wheels pulling it out of a turn.
short video of local Autocross(the racing equivalent of SL) showing how the car is setup to oversteer and adding throttle stops it from spinning.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8061599513319714304BTW that car with me behind the wheel has dozens of fastest times of the day aka overall win. I spanked so many exotics and muscle cars its funny. 200 wheel horsepower in a 1900lb car with 8 inch wide tires.
Even in the fastest cars I have driven Shifter Karts and Formula Atlantics they were still set up to oversteer.Evne the grippiest cars F1 car drift.