This comes partially from boredom, but I'm also curious how and why people got into cars/driving and how/why you got into drifting. It's as simple as that.
Me first
I can't really say why I drive the way I do. I just sort of have this driving spirit, was born with it I guess. I think it comes from my mom's side, cause my dad drives like crap. My mom on the other hand has a natural wee-zoom sort of driving style, grandma on my mom's side too. It's always fun co-riding with a 70 year old running 80 down a back road and nearly getting air-borne over a bump with the minivan. I seemed to have gotten the gene. Yes! Thank God! Haha.
My actual driving days started a little over 10 years ago. I got my license and a an '86 Buick Somerset(Buick incarnation of the Grand Am chassis, two door Skylark), and I promply quit riding the bus and started beating the tar out of my car. My brother and I(twins) each had one and we'd kind of race home from schoold down the gravel back roads between our house and school, pretty much 6 miles of straights and 90's, couple of sweepers, all gravel. It was a blast. We got crazy fast too, stupid fast, maybe just stupid, lol. I never really slowed down from then on.
Even today, I still blast down the same back roads. I just have a little more inkling of self preservation and preservation for my car and other people's property. I also have a far greater understanding of science and physics and the way a car behaves.
I am always progressing with my driving ability. Drifting was just a natural progression. You get to a point where you just stay at the limits. It was time to cross it and see what was on the other side.
I accidentally came across drifting by somehow seeing an episode of Initial D. That got me hooked, but I had no clue what it was or how it worked. It was also the start of my journey through the physics if cars: springs, swaybars, roll stiffness, traction circles, momentum, etc.
Till this point, my desire to know how cars worked was minimal. I drove fast and accepted what the car did. I didn't understand it. However, by this time I knew physics. Drifting peaked my interest and physics let me understand, comprehend, and build my ideas.
For several months I've been playing this PC game called Live For Speed(LFS), a racing simulator built by 3 guys over the course of a couple years. It was suprisingly accurate and about as true-to-life as you can get on a PC and provided a venue for the more dangerous driving escapades. As well, it had a slew of vehicle platforms: fwd, rwd, awd, and it supported tons of car tuning: springs, sways, tire pressure, camber, caster, brake bias/force, steering,... I started drifitng in that and got quite good over time. I started drifting my old Lesabre on the back roads. I'd apply techniques and get a feel for the way the car behaved. I'd try something and see how it worked. If the behavior was odd or I didn't understand what happened, I'd think about it and figure out what I was doing wrong, how could I change it, and how I could make it work the way I wanted it to. I'd test it in LFS, and try it in my Lesabre. I'd adapt and change my technique to fit the car. It was a real-life, virtual, and conceptual learning experience. Suprisingly, real and virtual mimiced each other almost seamlessly and accuratly. Physics and some conceptual thinking brought understanding to car behavior. Practice and adaptation brought smoothness and accuracy. It really all came together very nicely. I and my driving ability advanced. In a few months time, I was tossing that boat of a car around like a toy, and I was having a blast. There's nothing quite like tossing a +2 ton tank sideways flying towards a 90 near highways speeds with gravel bouncing off the floor pan/wells and billows of dust pouring out from behind.
The rest is history.
My only wish was that I could have gotten into some real racing, anything. I would have loved to race carts or midgets when I was younger. I'd still currently love to get into rally. I just neither have the funds nor time to do so currently. That pesky college and work keep getting in the way, lol. AutoX'ing, ameture rallying, some actual drift events in a couple years, oh yeah! Till then, I'm creating my future and trying to pay for it.
Me first
I can't really say why I drive the way I do. I just sort of have this driving spirit, was born with it I guess. I think it comes from my mom's side, cause my dad drives like crap. My mom on the other hand has a natural wee-zoom sort of driving style, grandma on my mom's side too. It's always fun co-riding with a 70 year old running 80 down a back road and nearly getting air-borne over a bump with the minivan. I seemed to have gotten the gene. Yes! Thank God! Haha.
My actual driving days started a little over 10 years ago. I got my license and a an '86 Buick Somerset(Buick incarnation of the Grand Am chassis, two door Skylark), and I promply quit riding the bus and started beating the tar out of my car. My brother and I(twins) each had one and we'd kind of race home from schoold down the gravel back roads between our house and school, pretty much 6 miles of straights and 90's, couple of sweepers, all gravel. It was a blast. We got crazy fast too, stupid fast, maybe just stupid, lol. I never really slowed down from then on.
Even today, I still blast down the same back roads. I just have a little more inkling of self preservation and preservation for my car and other people's property. I also have a far greater understanding of science and physics and the way a car behaves.
I am always progressing with my driving ability. Drifting was just a natural progression. You get to a point where you just stay at the limits. It was time to cross it and see what was on the other side.
I accidentally came across drifting by somehow seeing an episode of Initial D. That got me hooked, but I had no clue what it was or how it worked. It was also the start of my journey through the physics if cars: springs, swaybars, roll stiffness, traction circles, momentum, etc.
Till this point, my desire to know how cars worked was minimal. I drove fast and accepted what the car did. I didn't understand it. However, by this time I knew physics. Drifting peaked my interest and physics let me understand, comprehend, and build my ideas.
For several months I've been playing this PC game called Live For Speed(LFS), a racing simulator built by 3 guys over the course of a couple years. It was suprisingly accurate and about as true-to-life as you can get on a PC and provided a venue for the more dangerous driving escapades. As well, it had a slew of vehicle platforms: fwd, rwd, awd, and it supported tons of car tuning: springs, sways, tire pressure, camber, caster, brake bias/force, steering,... I started drifitng in that and got quite good over time. I started drifting my old Lesabre on the back roads. I'd apply techniques and get a feel for the way the car behaved. I'd try something and see how it worked. If the behavior was odd or I didn't understand what happened, I'd think about it and figure out what I was doing wrong, how could I change it, and how I could make it work the way I wanted it to. I'd test it in LFS, and try it in my Lesabre. I'd adapt and change my technique to fit the car. It was a real-life, virtual, and conceptual learning experience. Suprisingly, real and virtual mimiced each other almost seamlessly and accuratly. Physics and some conceptual thinking brought understanding to car behavior. Practice and adaptation brought smoothness and accuracy. It really all came together very nicely. I and my driving ability advanced. In a few months time, I was tossing that boat of a car around like a toy, and I was having a blast. There's nothing quite like tossing a +2 ton tank sideways flying towards a 90 near highways speeds with gravel bouncing off the floor pan/wells and billows of dust pouring out from behind.
The rest is history.
My only wish was that I could have gotten into some real racing, anything. I would have loved to race carts or midgets when I was younger. I'd still currently love to get into rally. I just neither have the funds nor time to do so currently. That pesky college and work keep getting in the way, lol. AutoX'ing, ameture rallying, some actual drift events in a couple years, oh yeah! Till then, I'm creating my future and trying to pay for it.
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