Originally posted by CrazyHawaiian
Well I completely disagree. Last time I checked, drifting is maintaining a controlled slide in an oversteered state through multiple turns. It has nothing to do with what type of car is used, and everything to do with driver skill. So you think that because FF cant generate oversteer with throttle its impossible to keep them in an oversteered state? Well you're wrong. I've seen it done and its not all handbrake action either. I have seen FF battle FR on the local mountain, and the FF driver was able to maintain oversteer through the course, and he did have a racing line, and guess what? He also BEAT alot of the FR guys. Why did this happen? It wasnt because he was driving FF. Its because the driver had SKILL. The definition of drifting itself has nothing to with what type of drivetrain the car has. What is comes down to is skill. If the driver has enough skill to control the car in an oversteered state, then thats drifting. By your definition, if the Drift King himself got out of his RWD car and stepped into a FF and started sliding, he wouldn't be drifting. Does that sound right to you? I'm not saying FF is the BEST thing out there, but I'm sick of the FF guys being dissed because FR guys think their drivetrain layout is superior. Get off the high horse already.
Well I completely disagree. Last time I checked, drifting is maintaining a controlled slide in an oversteered state through multiple turns. It has nothing to do with what type of car is used, and everything to do with driver skill. So you think that because FF cant generate oversteer with throttle its impossible to keep them in an oversteered state? Well you're wrong. I've seen it done and its not all handbrake action either. I have seen FF battle FR on the local mountain, and the FF driver was able to maintain oversteer through the course, and he did have a racing line, and guess what? He also BEAT alot of the FR guys. Why did this happen? It wasnt because he was driving FF. Its because the driver had SKILL. The definition of drifting itself has nothing to with what type of drivetrain the car has. What is comes down to is skill. If the driver has enough skill to control the car in an oversteered state, then thats drifting. By your definition, if the Drift King himself got out of his RWD car and stepped into a FF and started sliding, he wouldn't be drifting. Does that sound right to you? I'm not saying FF is the BEST thing out there, but I'm sick of the FF guys being dissed because FR guys think their drivetrain layout is superior. Get off the high horse already.
2. it has a lot to do with the drive train used. as i said before, every type has it's limitations, fwds don't have the capacity to control their rear tires like rwds do. in essence, anything that can't spin it's rear tires at a drivers whim, can't drift. why do you think no one in any major drift circuit uses a fwd? do you think ken nomura could drive as well as he does in a civic? he couldn't and wouldn't, because he wouldn't be able to control the back of his car. the fundamental advantage the seperates fwd from rwd is that rwds can dial in over and under steer at a moments notice and any racing driver will tell you this.
3. IT IS IMPOSSIBLE FOR A FRONT WHEEL DRIVE TO MAINTAIN ANY KIND OF CONSTANT STATE OF OVERSTEER. as i keep saying, if you can't control your rear tires, you can't maintain oversteer. a rwd can maintain oversteer indefinently, you could drift around in a circle for as long as the tires hold up. a fwd couldn't even make a complete circle before the rear wheels dug back in. that has nothing to do with skill, it's the vehicles limits.
4. did you ever stop to think that maybe those rwd competitors on the mountain weren't that great?
have you ever seen grip video vol. 2? there's a hawaiian guy in a white boro rps13 that couldn't drift for shat. he kept running off track, he constantly spun out, he hit the barrier a few times, he only managed to maintain a slide 2-3 times on the whole video. but there were two guys, one in a sentra, the other a focus, that went out and slid around a decreasing radius hair pin, and were sliding pretty well. but the one thing you'll notice every time they went out, is that they lost momentum at the corner exit. why? because their rear tires weren't sliding, they'd bite in halfway through and immediately slow the car. so were they drifting? no, they couldn't maintain oversteer, all because of the rear tires. it has nothing to do with skill at that point, it's the car you're driving that's keeping you from sliding. you should never have to fight a car to keep it sliding.
5. i never tried to define drifting, that was all you.
6. i doubt the drift king would try to drift a fwd. he knows as well as we ALL do that fwds are limited and if he tried he'd make a few corners before he lost all momebntum or came to a corner that was too large for a fwd to drift. why do you think you never see him "drift" in a fwd? i've seen him drift ae86s, fc3s', fd3s', s13s, rps13s, s14s, s15s, imprezas, lancers, altezzas, etc., but i've never seen him drift a single fwd. was there an integra, civic or accord type r in drift bible? no. why? because he knows they can't drift. again, it's not skill, it's the vehicle.
7. it's not that fr guys are insulting you, it's just that you guys want to have your cake and eat it too. you won't accept your cars limitations. you'll chase us around in circles and argue all the time, always trying to push this argument, but in the end we both know that you can't drift. it's like you see it as a personal attack on your level of skill or your competency to build your car. it's not. it's not that i'm trying to say that ff sucks, it's just not good in this specific application. fwds are good for other things, grip driving, they're decent in drag racing, rally driving, they just suck for drifting.
the bottom line is, rwd is the best platform for drifting and just because your car is traveling sideways doesn't mean your car is capable of drifting.
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