Okie, if you look hard enough, you can find a "dangerous" corner at ANY track! It's just a matter of how you approach that specific corner that will determine your chances for damage.
1. Blackhawk Farms Raceway: T7: If you go off, go off straight, it's flat and filled with weeds. If you try to "save" the corner, you drop into a swamp filled with trees.
2. Gateway: T7 feeds from the infield onto the banked oval track. The transition can get the car a little loose, and if you hit it with too much power down at the wrong angle, you spin the car 180* and slide up the track into a wall.
3. Putnam Park: T8 (carousel) if you slide off the outside, you will find a tire wall and Aarmco. T10: Too much throttle at exit, and you push out into the Aarmco that angles in to meet the track, protecting pit lane.
4. Autobahn CC South track: T3: early apex, and you find Aarmco. T5: Too much speed and you find a berm, tire wall, then Aarmco protecting a corner worker station.
5. Autobahn CC Full track: North/south transition: Too much throttle at exit, or lift oversteer, and you loop around to the Aarmco on the inside, protecting the south-track pit lane.
6. Mid-Ohio: Madness: outside line and you can find a wall; Thunder Valley: numerous sins, numerous things to hit!
7. Sebring: Final turn track-out is up against a concrete wall...
I could go on, but you get the idea. All you need to do is be a bit conservative in certain corners, and pick and choose which ones you're willing to drive more aggressively. I have been through The Kink hundreds of times, both in my own car, and in students' cars, and if it's taken properly, with focus and respect, it's a zero-drama event. Hell, last weekend, I made a pass right at apex of The Kink. I entered the Carousel 40' behind a CMC Mustang during one of the races, pulled up to his bumper, and we freight-trained the inside line past a 944 nose to tail... We both accelerated out of the carousel, I pulled right and got inside of the CMC car, we did our little brake-check at the two marker, went a touch deep, then accelerated through, and he popped over behind me midway between apex and track-out. No drama. We both knew what we were doing, went into the corner at slightly reduced speed to compensate for the altered lines, and got about our business.
In the end, unless you drive like a wild-man, constantly running off the edge of the track, the walls make no difference. Keep it on the black stuff, and you'll never find 'em!