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#1
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Re: Getaway in Stockholm street racing video
The cops shouldn't have even bothered trying. That car was long gone before they even got back into their cars.
Euro police pull infront of you when they pull you over? Crazy Euro's! Only good thing about this vid was hearing it purrrrr. Also, he's not very good of a driver. His shifting was very rough at times and he slid on several turns. A good driver doesn't skid, they brake before the turn and accel through the turn. There's no sliding involved. |
#2
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Re: Getaway in Stockholm street racing video
Pokerstars anyone?
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#3
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Re: Getaway in Stockholm street racing video
mostly agree. ever seen WRC though?
also, the only way to know that you are at the limits (without having a finely tuned race car on a memorized track that you have run 1000 times) is to push them and occasionally break them. if you drive flat out through the streets of stockholm for 10 minutes, and never skid, you are not driving 10/10ths. period. even F1 drivers lock up the wheels under breaking sometimes. and they are the best in the world. |
#4
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Re: Getaway in Stockholm street racing video
I might be wrong as I'm no expert, but when I see F1 drivers do it, I'm more inclined to think it was an intentional drift.
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#5
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Re: Getaway in Stockholm street racing video
i'm no expert either, but you are def. right that whatever F1 drivers do, they mean to do it.
i just don't see it as black and white as always braking before a turn, and accelerating out. there are just nuances to driving, like trail-braking, which is staying on the brakes late into the turn, to shift more weight, and therefore traction to the front tires, to increase the yaw angle and 'drift' for decreasing radius turns and the such. also since the OP stated it was a turbo, early throttle application might be needed to get or keep the turbo's spooled up, to reduce lag. an example would be, if you come out of a turn w/ no oversteer, but no boost, it might take you a while to get some boost, and you loose a couple seconds of maximum acceleration. if you throttle early, and go a little wide, it might be more than offset by having full boost at the beginning of the strait, since that initial harder acceleration and resulting speed will be carried over the entire lenght of the strait, multiplying that inital speed gain by the entire time you are accelerating. |
#6
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Re: Getaway in Stockholm street racing video
You obviously know more than me so I bow to you on this one.
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#7
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Re: Getaway in Stockholm street racing video
[ QUOTE ]
You obviously know more than me so I bow to you on this one. [/ QUOTE ] nah, you were 99% right, and i was just being a picky ass. i love cars and stuff... |
#8
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Re: Getaway in Stockholm street racing video
[ QUOTE ]
i'm no expert either, but you are def. right that whatever F1 drivers do, they mean to do it. i just don't see it as black and white as always braking before a turn, and accelerating out. there are just nuances to driving, like trail-braking, which is staying on the brakes late into the turn, to shift more weight, and therefore traction to the front tires, to increase the yaw angle and 'drift' for decreasing radius turns and the such. also since the OP stated it was a turbo, early throttle application might be needed to get or keep the turbo's spooled up, to reduce lag. an example would be, if you come out of a turn w/ no oversteer, but no boost, it might take you a while to get some boost, and you loose a couple seconds of maximum acceleration. if you throttle early, and go a little wide, it might be more than offset by having full boost at the beginning of the strait, since that initial harder acceleration and resulting speed will be carried over the entire lenght of the strait, multiplying that inital speed gain by the entire time you are accelerating. [/ QUOTE ] Jesus...wtf. press right pedal-go faster, press middle pedal-go slower. [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img] -SmileyEH |
#9
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Re: Getaway in Stockholm street racing video
[ QUOTE ]
i'm no expert either, but you are def. right that whatever F1 drivers do, they mean to do it. i just don't see it as black and white as always braking before a turn, and accelerating out. there are just nuances to driving, like trail-braking, which is staying on the brakes late into the turn, to shift more weight, and therefore traction to the front tires, to increase the yaw angle and 'drift' for decreasing radius turns and the such. also since the OP stated it was a turbo, early throttle application might be needed to get or keep the turbo's spooled up, to reduce lag. an example would be, if you come out of a turn w/ no oversteer, but no boost, it might take you a while to get some boost, and you loose a couple seconds of maximum acceleration. if you throttle early, and go a little wide, it might be more than offset by having full boost at the beginning of the strait, since that initial harder acceleration and resulting speed will be carried over the entire lenght of the strait, multiplying that inital speed gain by the entire time you are accelerating. [/ QUOTE ] so you're a big gran turismo junkie too huh? |
#10
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Re: Getaway in Stockholm street racing video
[ QUOTE ]
so you're a big gran turismo junkie too huh? [/ QUOTE ] hell yea. i don't play any video games anymore, but when GT2 came out while i was in HS, i stayed up all night playing it. which was a big thing at the time, haha. you should read Skip Barber: The Art of Race Driving. That book ruined me as far as being a slow ass A->B driver. i'm looking at buying me a race car in the next few years... |
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