Woohoo!
Since my sweet 7 is sleeping for the winter I cant FR drift anymore untile next april. But I found the solution to my problem. ATV drifting. My wifes Father has this amazing 450 Bombadier 4x4 ATV that I can put on RWD only or 4WD. On the street (because he lives up north with no one around) where the snow is all flat and hard, I can drift for as long as I want. He's got a cool road with lots of S curves. My longest drift was approximatly 500 feet long in 3 curves non-stop!(I almost went in the ditch on that one). It took me about 30-45 minutes to adjust myself to the ATV and how it slides. In my first 10 minutes I did 4 spinouts (180's). It's hard at first on RWD not to spinout but a lot easier to drift for a long time, and on 4WD it's easy drifting but you cant really stay sideways for a long time unless you really go full throttle but then the front wheels lose their grip. But when you get used to it, you can really control every move, just like a car, only, it's a lot more slipery and you have to be a lot more gentle with the throttle.
Now I wish I'd be there right now instead of at work....
Well, at least I know what I'll be doing for most of my weekends.
Just thought I'd share my experience.
Spec.
Since my sweet 7 is sleeping for the winter I cant FR drift anymore untile next april. But I found the solution to my problem. ATV drifting. My wifes Father has this amazing 450 Bombadier 4x4 ATV that I can put on RWD only or 4WD. On the street (because he lives up north with no one around) where the snow is all flat and hard, I can drift for as long as I want. He's got a cool road with lots of S curves. My longest drift was approximatly 500 feet long in 3 curves non-stop!(I almost went in the ditch on that one). It took me about 30-45 minutes to adjust myself to the ATV and how it slides. In my first 10 minutes I did 4 spinouts (180's). It's hard at first on RWD not to spinout but a lot easier to drift for a long time, and on 4WD it's easy drifting but you cant really stay sideways for a long time unless you really go full throttle but then the front wheels lose their grip. But when you get used to it, you can really control every move, just like a car, only, it's a lot more slipery and you have to be a lot more gentle with the throttle.
Now I wish I'd be there right now instead of at work....
Well, at least I know what I'll be doing for most of my weekends.
Just thought I'd share my experience.
Spec.
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