V8 powerNever tried
I suppose if you fling the car rapidly into corners then downforce wouldn't affect it that much
Although if you gently Power-Over through the corner then it would help
Boundary LayerAbout D1GP - I wont say this as a rule, but I believe that the majority of the wings and body kits seen in that series are for looks only. In any case where downforce is used, I've read that it is normally to increase rear grip. Many of the best drivers prefer a car with a neutral or understeering feel because they are easier to control.
NielsI wouldn't know how to make it look like a spoiler then. The looks of a spoiler creates downforce. So how could you make a spoiler look like a normal one, but without the downforce? Make it flat?
Lets say you go into a long corner and use throttle control to enter, and then change your throttle to max. If you go faster, grip will increase on the front instead of staying balanced, so you would already have to decrease your countersteering just to make up for that increasing grip. But that would mess up the direction you wanted to go aka your line.
jimj73and surely, at then end of a drift, when you're speeding up to exit a drift, a little bit more grip thanks to downforce would be useful, no?
thanks
NielsI would really apreciate some extra grip in the exit, so it might be possible with downforce. But the speed change between entrance and exit of a drift aint that big to make it grip effectively enough through the corners.
jimj73so does anybody actively use downforce in their setups, for any cars, or specifically any courses? Nobody's even tried it? I realise that it is related to the speed that you're going - but surely for that reason it can be of use, no??? Do people not use downforce and wings in reality - in the D1GP for example?
thanks
NielsI wouldn't know how to make it look like a spoiler then. The looks of a spoiler creates downforce. So how could you make a spoiler look like a normal one, but without the downforce? Make it flat?
For downforce in my settings, I never tried to get oversteer with downforce, it's a cheap trick maybe but it's very unpredictable if you do. Lets say you go into a long corner and use throttle control to enter, and then change your throttle to max. If you go faster, grip will increase on the front instead of staying balanced, so you would already have to decrease your countersteering just to make up for that increasing grip. But that would mess up the direction you wanted to go aka your line.
jimj73but more importantly - does the downforce work in the same way even when you're not travelling strictly speaking in a straight line - ie sideways in a drift? and generally speaking one tends to keep, or at least try to keep a fairly constant speed throughout the lenght of a drift, no? and surely, at then end of a drift, when you're speeding up to exit a drift, a little bit more grip thanks to downforce would be useful, no?
thanks
sicbeingAs far as I've known, you don't ever speed up during a drift, you only go slower throughout it. Oversteer makes you go slower than grip racing, because you can't accelerate through turns.
Drifting: Enter a corner at a high speed, slide through it, exit at a lower speed
Grip Racing: Enter at a slower speed, accelerate through the corner, exit at a faster speed (term "slow in, fast out")
Boundary LayerAbout D1GP - I wont say this as a rule, but I believe that the majority of the wings and body kits seen in that series are for looks only. In any case where downforce is used, I've read that it is normally to increase rear grip. Many of the best drivers prefer a car with a neutral or understeering feel because they are easier to control.
l2evI remember watching Formula D, and one of the drifters was talking about his new wing. He loved how it "caught" the car which allowed him to whip the car a little harder. I have used downforce plenty of times. I only ever use it to fix a problem such as oversteer at high speeds. A little downforce on the rear will fix that right up.
well, a wing should still provide downforce even if the wing is going sideways. alot of stunt planes can go sideways a little(using the rudder controls) and they still fly.jimj73yeah - i wondered that too about a spoiler!
but more importantly - does the downforce work in the same way even when you're not travelling strictly speaking in a straight line - ie sideways in a drift? and generally speaking one tends to keep, or at least try to keep a fairly constant speed throughout the lenght of a drift, no? and surely, at then end of a drift, when you're speeding up to exit a drift, a little bit more grip thanks to downforce would be useful, no?
thanks
Boundary LayerAbout D1GP - I wont say this as a rule, but I believe that the majority of the wings and body kits seen in that series are for looks only. In any case where downforce is used...etc etc
NielsI wouldn't know how to make it look like a spoiler only then. The looks of a spoiler creates downforce. So how could you make a spoiler look like a normal one, but without the downforce?Make it flat?
Boundary LayerNever did I say that putting a GT wing on a car does not create downforce... infact, this is my exact point GT4Fan.