Originally posted by malcolm
Thanks for just proving my point and contradicting yours.
Thanks for just proving my point and contradicting yours.
You are correct. Wider tires DO in fact make break-away more harsh. However, they give you the traction you need while the tire is sliding/spinning.
How about we change things a little...
(Engine) torque powers the (rear) tires to cause them to spin.
Drifting is about controlling the rear tires - "throttle steering".
If we eliminate the specs of the rear tires, you could conceivably control almost any dimension tire as long as you have enough torque, right?
So what does wider (or hipari) has to do with any of this?
It just becomes a personal favorite of the driver.
In order to combat the harsh break-away with the wider tire, you can either run lower-profile tires, or stretch them (same result).
Lower profile or hipari causes the tires to get "stiffer".
A stiffer tires means more abrupt break-away.
Of course, running narrower tires would be stupid, because you could never get enough traction, and your drifts would have to be terribly slow to keep from spinning.
I thought you wanted to sliding dynamics?
I mean there is a limit to how narrow you can practically go, but within reason why would you care?
Throttle steering is the driver's skill that keeps the rear tires working in your favor.
Skinnier rear tires allows for easier loss of traction in rear, but you should be able to keep it in control as long as your skills can handle it and the tires are not TOO skinny.
What does drifting speed have to do with skinny tires?
Someone mentioned hachi's going ape shit on 195's?
Drift speeds is dependent on vehicle speed (engine power), driver's skill, and how big your cajones is.
Do you mean to imply that you NEED wide tires to go faster???
In concise conclusion:
wide tires = harsh break-away
wide tires = lots of traction
hipari/stretching = smoother break-away
therefore:
wide tires + hipari = lots of traction with acceptable break-away.
wide tires = harsh break-away
wide tires = lots of traction
hipari/stretching = smoother break-away
therefore:
wide tires + hipari = lots of traction with acceptable break-away.
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