- 2,805
- Porto
- Burnout_PT
Yup, and I love it :-)Ahhh, the old "Speed Vs. Handing" debate, it will forever remain in motorsports as the question everyone knows, and at the same time doesn't know the answer to![]()
About 50K. Just add 50% (it's x1.6)30 MPH (I have no idea what that is in KM's)
Again yes, I agree. But still, I love kikin' AWD but with a RWD :-)RWD's shouldn't be competing with anything but RWD's, and the same should be said for AWD's and FWD's.
This I don't, at lest not completely. Only happens if you can't put the power down on a RWD and/or don't have well setup. If traction is not a problem, a RWD "rounds" the corner nicely, while a FWD or AWD tends to understeer. If power is too much a RWD is in trouble, oversteering.I believe cornering is a priority, and I believe that AWD cars have the clear advantage in that department.
Oh and if you take the same car, RWD vs AWD you can confirm this. A medium powered AWD loses (added weight, and slightly lower top speed come into play as well) when power is easy to put down on tarmack. But on ice or dirt, it will blow the RWD away...
What Michael is saying there at 3:25, is that he typically can out brake other drivers. He can brake later, while still hitting the apex. And thus the old saying: Brake to go faster. Words to live by.
Ok then, nothing to do with speed it self but slowing down later.
However according to Nurburgring lap times the GT-R is one of the fastest production cars in the world, so I have no problem with it's rediculous speed in the game.
The AWD Lancer Evolution X can handle better through the corners but it's engine isn't very good so most RWD cars can make the time up they lost in the corners on the straight.
I haven't driven or raced against many skylines so no comment on them.
I haven't studied it hard enough yet, but I think I read the GT-R transmission starts as a RWD, and uses FWD only when it needs to put the power down. It actually has a almost traditional RWD transmission, and then a secondary one brings traction back to the front again. That is called a transaxle, and the dual clutch lives inthe rear as well to optimize eight distribution. That and the most advanced difs and electronics make it almost a RWD/AWD as needed, and that makes it the fastest in the Nurburgring.
The 2 liter engines on Imprezas or Evos (WRC street versions are limited in this way) have no grunt to take on most 2.5 or more RWD cars, although max power output can be the same.
The skyline was a piece of crap (on GT4) as a AWD. I had the most awkward settings on it just to make it drift on all 4, as it kept understeering under power. That is why I haven't even tried it on GT5P, and why I don't like AWD's on tarmac.