ok...
a drift is the fastest way through a turn... correct? YES
Through SOME turns---yes
sliding is not a drift... correct? YES
NO
Difference between a slide and a drift...
Although drifting is having your car sideways through a turn, it is not considered "slliding"...
But it REQUIRES sliding so it MUST be considered sliding
How is this you say?
Only through mobia-strip reasoning...
Sliding through a turn involves getting your car sideways through a turn,
mostly agreed--although sliding does not have to be sideways
howver drifting has more to it than that.
OK---show me. I'm still not convinced
Drifting is sliding,
But I thought Drifting WAS NOT sliding
but in a controlled motion,
Ok, your getting closer. It is a type of sliding....
while maintaining the lines used during racing.
Then you just lost me here. Drift lines and racing lines are only the same in rare instances. Racers rarely drift because the racing line is faster for most turns. (and on a side note---drifters rarely race).
The rear end of a car is moving around the turn faster than the rest of the car,
Agreed--it is taking a larger arc so it is moving faster (but not necessarily in the right direction)
therfore maintaining a faster speed during the turn,
OK, so the rear end is moving faster during the turn---we already established that. If you are trying to imply that because the rear end is moving faster than the front end of the car, that the car is actually going to be faster coming out of the turn you have missed a logical step----that step being that it will only be faster IF the front of the car is traveling at the same rate it would be traveling if the car were at the limit and not sliding trough the turn.
allowing for a HIGHER exit speed.
See above.....
While sliding, there is no set line for a turn,
So, sliding is random, haphazard, uncontrolled??? I doubt it!
thus there is no control over the cars cornering speed.
And if sliding is not random, haphazard and uncontrolled then, THERE IS some control over cornering speed.
So while sliding, you actually lose speed while going through a turn, and drifting you maintain speed while cornering.
In conclusion...you have not actually proven this much less have you provided a theoretical basis that holds water for such assertions.
Now on to you points about FF
a drift is the fastest way through a turn... correct? YES
Through SOME turns---yes
sliding is not a drift... correct? YES
NO
Difference between a slide and a drift...
Although drifting is having your car sideways through a turn, it is not considered "slliding"...
But it REQUIRES sliding so it MUST be considered sliding
How is this you say?
Only through mobia-strip reasoning...
Sliding through a turn involves getting your car sideways through a turn,
mostly agreed--although sliding does not have to be sideways
howver drifting has more to it than that.
OK---show me. I'm still not convinced
Drifting is sliding,
But I thought Drifting WAS NOT sliding
but in a controlled motion,
Ok, your getting closer. It is a type of sliding....
while maintaining the lines used during racing.
Then you just lost me here. Drift lines and racing lines are only the same in rare instances. Racers rarely drift because the racing line is faster for most turns. (and on a side note---drifters rarely race).
The rear end of a car is moving around the turn faster than the rest of the car,
Agreed--it is taking a larger arc so it is moving faster (but not necessarily in the right direction)
therfore maintaining a faster speed during the turn,
OK, so the rear end is moving faster during the turn---we already established that. If you are trying to imply that because the rear end is moving faster than the front end of the car, that the car is actually going to be faster coming out of the turn you have missed a logical step----that step being that it will only be faster IF the front of the car is traveling at the same rate it would be traveling if the car were at the limit and not sliding trough the turn.
allowing for a HIGHER exit speed.
See above.....
While sliding, there is no set line for a turn,
So, sliding is random, haphazard, uncontrolled??? I doubt it!
thus there is no control over the cars cornering speed.
And if sliding is not random, haphazard and uncontrolled then, THERE IS some control over cornering speed.
So while sliding, you actually lose speed while going through a turn, and drifting you maintain speed while cornering.
In conclusion...you have not actually proven this much less have you provided a theoretical basis that holds water for such assertions.
Now on to you points about FF
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