wow, 3 pages of bullcrap. I saw one post that skimmed over what would make a good drift car to learn on, that was posted by Boro86driver.
The hachi (Corolla) is probably one of the worst rwd cars to LEARN on. It's light yes, balanced, sort of, but SHORT WHEEL BASE makes it very UNSTABLE and twitchy. I know, cause I learned in one. It's an old car, they break alot, etc. etc.
HOWEVER, if you can manage to become good in a short wheel base Corolla, you can drift anything.
Anything with a longer wheelbase but not too long, makes for a much more stable platform for drift. Which happens to be an S chassis, in fact, I would say the S14 is the easiest to drift as far as S chassis goes. However other larger RWD cars are very easy to drift and very forgiving.... but your limited to that in the states I guess. Im not just talking out of my a$$ either (like most people here seem to do), I have owned, built, raced, and drifted the cars I speak of above.
So you want something, STABLE... which means a decent wheelbase, ie: not hachi roku Corolla.
Affordable, because you will spend all your other money on fixing the car, parts, and tires. Drifting is expensive and to be good at it, requires alot of time, practice, and talent, so if your not willing to commit to all of that, then don't waste your time.
The hachi (Corolla) is probably one of the worst rwd cars to LEARN on. It's light yes, balanced, sort of, but SHORT WHEEL BASE makes it very UNSTABLE and twitchy. I know, cause I learned in one. It's an old car, they break alot, etc. etc.
HOWEVER, if you can manage to become good in a short wheel base Corolla, you can drift anything.
Anything with a longer wheelbase but not too long, makes for a much more stable platform for drift. Which happens to be an S chassis, in fact, I would say the S14 is the easiest to drift as far as S chassis goes. However other larger RWD cars are very easy to drift and very forgiving.... but your limited to that in the states I guess. Im not just talking out of my a$$ either (like most people here seem to do), I have owned, built, raced, and drifted the cars I speak of above.
So you want something, STABLE... which means a decent wheelbase, ie: not hachi roku Corolla.
Affordable, because you will spend all your other money on fixing the car, parts, and tires. Drifting is expensive and to be good at it, requires alot of time, practice, and talent, so if your not willing to commit to all of that, then don't waste your time.
Comment