You're more right there than you may even realize. Most people use insanely high values in the belief that it gives more traction but in reality it does just what you've described - if there's enough power to break both tyres loose, you're gone.
I very seldom use more than 5/10/5 on anything RWD unless the car has some specific behavioural issue that needs to be addressed, no matter if a 550PP sports car on comfort softs or a GT3 on racing hards, because it just works. Maximize the manoeuvrability and give just enough locking to prevent spinning the inner wheel, and if it happens slightly every now and then, so be it. It's still ultimately faster as the car takes off pointed to where you want it to with an occasional faint squeal from the inner rear instead of either going straight or getting sideways, both of which need backing off a lot more to recover from.
Yep, fully agreed! Inner wheel slip is safer and is almost like a built in TCS.
Back in GT5 (I think?) we used to look to light up both rear tyres at the same time, or even the inside one slightly first. This was just from the in-game "red tyre = too hot" indicator. The inside tyre would have less load on it, so to smoke it, it'd have to be spinning faster than the heavily laden outside one = some built in wheel slip.
Even for drifting I would use rather soft diff settings, for a nice progressive feel at the limit.
I've only recently got GT7 before Xmas and have only started 'tuning' (or trying to) for the past few weeks, so am a fair bit behind everyone else. I tend to favour the road cars and sport tyres how BREAD82 explained it above, so wanted to got this sorted out in GT7, but have been struggling, alot(!).
I've been trying with everything from the classic American muscle, modern Merc 'barges', Supra, S2000, BMWs etc etc as stock but also, mildly tuned (just custom susp or LSD) or heavily tuned with with these parts and alot more power, but keeping tyres either comfort or sports - up to 6-700pp.
I've tried all sorts of setups from balancing out default settings, to very hard (springs), reversing this, full soft, same with roll bars, pretty much everything - but I still can't see a 'pattern' where the tyre indicator on screen shows the inside wheel clearly and consistently lighting up before the outside wheel.
Even if I do the above with the ACC LSD at 5, which on previous GTs
almost guaranteed a 'One Wheel Peel', 'One Tire Fire' for the inside wheel on most FR cars etc then it still doesn't happen on GT7. The closest I can get is having the both wheels light up at the same time, but the majority of the time it's always the outer wheel which starts to light up on the tyre indicator first, even if only for a fraction of a second.
I'm not an engineer, or mechanic so to be honest, I don't fully understand alot, or most, of the more technical posts. I just deal with what the game gives me, and try to experiment, test, learn and rinse and repeat.
A few things have sort of 'jumped out at me' with GT7:
Stock cars feel so good, like really good, especially for a cheeky powerslide or 2, everything from Nissan Sylvias and American muscle (both old and new) on Comfort Mediums to modern cars like the BMW M cars
Dampers and LSD just seem to be 'different' on GT7
I started to think (no actual proof or evidence to support this yet), and I'm not sure if I'm going to explain this in the 'right' way but:
It's like the numerical value of the LSD in GT7 (or at least the ACC part of the LSD) have been moved/shifted, and what was '10 to 12' for LSD ACC (the point at which the rear wheels would spin together) in previous GT's, is now '5' in GT7(?) i.e. it's the starting point.
So GT5 & 6 were:
5 10 20 30 40 50 60
But GT7 is actually
10/12 20 30 40 50 60
But
shows the same as before
5 10 20 30 40 50 60
As with Greycap, the lower figures seem 'better', as that's where I'm ending up with so many of the setups/cars.
Like I say, I don't have any real life knowledge or experience, I just see 'numbers' in a game and how these change the way the car drives, so happy to be corrected by those who know more.