I've pulled some nice drifts with my automatic s14 all you need to do is have it in 2nd gear going at a high rpm and then when you are ready to make it slide let the throttle go down and step on it and it should keep you in a good powerband. I've tried doing it on D but it shifts up 2 secs into a slide. 1 i only use when im going slow otherwise it still sucks because it dosent accelerate that fast.
If you use your ebrake your gonna end up blowing your tranny up because if you pull the ebrake and your tranny is still sending power to the back wheels and its going to mess it up unlike manual were you just clutch in before pulling the ebrake then when you put the ebrake back down you put it in gear. The best way i found to use the ebrake is to learn to quickly put it on N and pull the ebrake then put it down and put it in 2. It sounds hard and it is because by the time you put it back in gear you just wasted about 4 secs. It takes practice but you should go to a big parking lot and try some drifting techniques out that you dont have to heavily really on your ebrake or clutch. AT drifts are harder to control so you have to work on your suspension set up if you want to get better results. The only thing is that AT sometimes decides to shift up when it wants to, then realizing its too hard to power through then shift back down, this causes some understeer and if you try it in a street you might just end up hitting something like a curb.
Good luck
If you use your ebrake your gonna end up blowing your tranny up because if you pull the ebrake and your tranny is still sending power to the back wheels and its going to mess it up unlike manual were you just clutch in before pulling the ebrake then when you put the ebrake back down you put it in gear. The best way i found to use the ebrake is to learn to quickly put it on N and pull the ebrake then put it down and put it in 2. It sounds hard and it is because by the time you put it back in gear you just wasted about 4 secs. It takes practice but you should go to a big parking lot and try some drifting techniques out that you dont have to heavily really on your ebrake or clutch. AT drifts are harder to control so you have to work on your suspension set up if you want to get better results. The only thing is that AT sometimes decides to shift up when it wants to, then realizing its too hard to power through then shift back down, this causes some understeer and if you try it in a street you might just end up hitting something like a curb.
Good luck
Comment