by definition, is ff "drifting" really drifting? just slam the e-brake and slide sideways without really spinning the tires, or is there a new teqnique(or what ever) i think its fun but not drifting.
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Re: ff drifting?
Originally posted by Nissan_Racer
by definition, is ff "drifting" really drifting? just slam the e-brake and slide sideways without really spinning the tires, or is there a new teqnique(or what ever) i think its fun but not drifting.
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Re: Re: Re: ff drifting?
Originally posted by pcbootleger
you can use RR cars too... the mr2 is excellent for drifitng.
RR is a whole other story....you can drift those things too, but from what i hear it takes mad skillz to be good b/c they have so much inertia energy built into the rear when they start sliding due to the mass of the engine. i dunno' though, i've never been in one. i've seen vids of them drifting, but looks very hard (although cool ).
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Originally posted by Sky_kiD
I'm probally one of the few people who drifts ff without the P-brake. But whats hard about it? Feinting and Braking drifts both are not drivechain dependent
basically you can get sideways but you can't hold it for the drift outside the bounderies of your inertia.
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Well this is a very valid point, ff drifts are allmost entirely dependant on the amount of energy you have going into the drift. But then you could make the same argument for alot of styles of rwd drift. If your car is sideways, then you cannot push the car sideways more with the rear wheels, since they point opposed to the direction your going.
Edit: I think the most significant difference, and the point you tryed to get across, is that with rwd you dont have to lose any speed initiating the drift, whereas in ff, some speed must be lost with the scrubbing of the back tires
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