DriftFactory, I understand what you are trying to say- that drifting places the suspension parts in some precarious positions- but it sounds to me like you have never gone off the sweeper at Buttonwillow at 100+ mph. Ever hit the curbs flying thru the Esses on the west loop? Talk about hitting a curb, and thats not 20 mph, thats 80mph. The difference in speed alone magnifies the force dramatically.
The simple fact is that the loads on a well-prepped car driven at the limit on a race track are still going to exceed nearly anything you see in drifting. How often do I see 4th gear drifting? Never (well, only very briefly on the bank at irwindale, but that hardly counts, I'm in 4th for about 5 seconds before the clip). How often do i see fourth gear flat-out on the track? Regularly.
But regardless, so-called "drift" parts are not made any stronger than those used for racing, and thats the bottom line. Drifting isn't exactly the cutting edge of parts development.
The simple fact is that the loads on a well-prepped car driven at the limit on a race track are still going to exceed nearly anything you see in drifting. How often do I see 4th gear drifting? Never (well, only very briefly on the bank at irwindale, but that hardly counts, I'm in 4th for about 5 seconds before the clip). How often do i see fourth gear flat-out on the track? Regularly.
But regardless, so-called "drift" parts are not made any stronger than those used for racing, and thats the bottom line. Drifting isn't exactly the cutting edge of parts development.
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