Rear Toe on high powered cars (ferrari etc)

  • Thread starter Thread starter Qxs-Storm
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Just wanted to mention that increasing rear toe on my 3 Italias has worked out well.
Suggest numbers of +0.30 to +0.50 for anything that goes fast!
LSD 40/45/x seems to go well with this setup...

I tried this offline with DS3, but it seems to work even better online with my wheel...

figured I'd share since most people are probably scared to increase rear toe beyond +0.20... but hey.. every car is different... so whatever.. *tired*
 
Qxs-Storm
Just wanted to mention that increasing rear toe on my 3 Italias has worked out well.
Suggest numbers of +0.30 to +0.50 for anything that goes fast!
LSD 40/45/x seems to go well with this setup...

I tried this offline with DS3, but it seems to work even better online with my wheel...

figured I'd share since most people are probably scared to increase rear toe beyond +0.20... but hey.. every car is different... so whatever.. *tired*

Yup rear toe is a great for those high powered MR cars, helps keep the back end in check. I've yet to tune up an Italia but I'll keep that in mind when I do, thanks.
 
Car goes faster with no toe, adding more toe just helps it go straight if you have a poor tune to start.
 
Car goes faster with no toe, adding more toe just helps it go straight if you have a poor tune to start.

toe supposed to help with cornering, but too much will decrease straight line acceleration/deceleration. Finding a good balance is the hard part. What works for one car won't necessarily work with another car.
 
The main reason people don't overdo toe is because if you were to turn tyre wear on, you'd find the tyres would wear faster with higher amounts of toe, because you're dragging them down the road at an angle, which also slows you down a bit.

It is an effective way of changing the handling of the car though, there's no debate about that.
 
Best way to tame the back of a car is to put a spoiler, then u dont need to increase toe that high.
 
Spoiler robs you of to much PP on a PP restricted car, I would much rather use a little rear toe, but only as last resort. I usually never use more than 0.08 in either direction
 
Finding a good balance is the hard part. What works for one car won't necessarily work with another car.

It can also depend on what tyres you're using and how much power the car has, aswell as other settings (like ride height, roll bars, dampers, LSD) that can also affect rear stability and grip.

You're 100% right though about finding a balance, not only with the different options you have in settings, but the results of these too.

Balancing tyre wear, lap times and overall race time is also important.

The main reason people don't overdo toe is because if you were to turn tyre wear on, you'd find the tyres would wear faster with higher amounts of toe, because you're dragging them down the road at an angle, which also slows you down a bit.

It is an effective way of changing the handling of the car though, there's no debate about that.

Yes, if 'abused' a high rear toe figure can murder your tyres, people need to be careful, it's not a 'magic cure'.

If used correctly it can work very well.

Spoiler robs you of to much PP on a PP restricted car, I would much rather use a little rear toe, but only as last resort. I usually never use more than 0.08 in either direction

Yes, aero is a very high use of PP, not 100% worth it in my opinion, some cars yes, but not all cars.

Some cars I race I've found that adjusting the suspension and LSD will give you more rear grip and stability than a spoiler anyway - without affecting lap times or tyre wear.

In real life spoilers do nothing below a set speed, the faster you go the more downforce they'll generate - whether this is accurately reflected in GT5 is another thing though.

If you adjust your suspension and LSD for rear grip and stability, this will work at all speeds, not just high speed.

A spoiler will do nothing for grip and stability at low speed 2nd gear corners / hairpins, LSD and suspension settings, will, in all corners.
 

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