Originally posted by malcolm
also, matt, you brought up a good point about forces, and how to initiate a drift. Enter a corner at the limit, not over. All four tires are at their max. let off the throttle, and brake a bit. Now the front tires have more weight on them, and are well under the limit of traction. The rear tires have less weight on them, have less traction, and thus start to slide because they are over the limit of traction.
also, matt, you brought up a good point about forces, and how to initiate a drift. Enter a corner at the limit, not over. All four tires are at their max. let off the throttle, and brake a bit. Now the front tires have more weight on them, and are well under the limit of traction. The rear tires have less weight on them, have less traction, and thus start to slide because they are over the limit of traction.
This depends on your driving style... I personally enjoy overloading the tires when I'm taking off. Too bad my truck doesn't have any torque... Where Malcolm probably enjoys breaking adhesion after clipping the limit...
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