Oh, okay. Well thanks for letting me know before starting my session. Well Famine said something about it in my Eiger lap video. And he said I was revving the car too much which was costing me valuable time. I really don't see how I was, I shifted the gears up and down correctly so I should have gotten at least a sub 1'07.000 or even 1'06.000. I'll post again:MT doesn't automatically mean shortshifting, you don't need to shortshift on RBR TT.
That applies for that specific car. It's all car related. If you take for example group 4 cars, you rev most of them all the way, but the Veyron, McLaren and I think one other, you shift at half way point of the rev bar (on bumper cam), that's just where the power is, torque and power curves are specific for each car. To save yourself from calculating and searching too much, just watch couple of top tier replays and see where people shift, they figured it out already, just copy that pattern. Happy lapping!Well Famine said something about it in my Eiger lap video. And he said I was revving the car too much which was costing me valuable time.
This, @Chris30 I recommend watching a top driver replay before you even start, watch where they brake, where they accelerate, when they change down a gear or up a gear and where on the rev counter/bar they shifted; TM in that wild American tank is a good one as almost the entire lap can be done in 4th gear, except the two long straights; watch @jontikis’s excellent lap which shows how using 4th gear exiting most corners gives better traction on exit (and where he shifts into 5th, there’s a little red line on the rev counter but you might not see that if you’re not in cockpit view)That applies for that specific car. It's all car related. If you take for example group 4 cars, you rev most of them all the way, but the Veyron, McLaren and I think one other, you shift at half way point of the rev bar (on bumper cam), that's just where the power is, torque and power curves are specific for each car. To save yourself from calculating and searching too much, just watch couple of top tier replays and see where people shift, they figured it out already, just copy that pattern. Happy lapping!
Oh, okay. Well thanks for letting me know before starting my session. Well Famine said something about it in my Eiger lap video. And he said I was revving the car too much which was costing me valuable time. I really don't see how I was, I shifted the gears up and down correctly so I should have gotten at least a sub 1'07.000 or even 1'06.000. I'll post again:
Well I did hear the engine make some weird noises when I was braking and lifting off the throttle.
A little bit off topic, but touching the subject of CSA (strong), have you noticed anything different since the 1.49 update? I sometimes turn it on, depends on the car/track/event, but more often than not, I forget to turn it off. For example, I did turn it on tonight because I was doing the weekly challenges, and WTC800 was a full wet race at Fuji. After that, I went to Spa to time trial some Praiano builds and enjoy the VR experience in the sunset, and went couple of laps in the F12 berlinetta, M3 '89 swapped etc... And I thought to myself, hmm, either I became a world class road car driver overnight or these setups are so amazing... And then I remembered I didn't turn off the CSA. Drove couple of laps with it turned off, times were literally the same, I had couple of more corrections to make but noting dramatic. My point being - I didn't even notice it turned on, of course in VR you don't have the blinking red light, and I just didn't feel the artificial corrections on my wheel like I did before, I think that it was improved somehow in the update, like it's less intrusive, or the new physics have something to do with it, it's literally the steery cheat mode like you call it, behaves just like you want it, you don't lose time, and you gain (much) stability and consistency.But with steery cheat mode firmly on its actually a lot of fun
That car needed short-shifting; the video @Tidgney provided said and showed it to you. It needed shifting at around 6,000rpm, you were letting it go into the red zone.Well Famine said something about it in my Eiger lap video. And he said I was revving the car too much which was costing me valuable time. I really don't see how I was, I shifted the gears up and down correctly
Just in case it wasn't clear from the other guys' explanations, here's a visual one. From your Eiger video:Well, thank you for explaining it better guys, I guess I'll have to adapt and just get a feel of how each car is supposed to act on certain tracks of the game. Dan gave a good detailed piece of information about the shifting and other basic info(MT). I'll keep that in mind for the newer TT's and Trial Mountain. I'll watch the top 20 replays and see what moves they pull in their laps.
It's too early to tell as I've only done a couple of laps in the dry, I've got my wheel settings cranked up since the update and with the increased strength of feedback to me it's still there. But I never feel like I'm fighting it, it feels like artificial weight that I press against which is a little unusual but natural feeling at the same time. It's hard to explain. I think in a way it filters out a lot of the control tuning that is used for pad players to get consistent counter-steering corrections and therefore makes counter steering corrections feel more natural to wheel users. I'm definitely still countersteering but it feels more intuitive even though I can 'feel' the CSA doing something.A little bit off topic, but touching the subject of CSA (strong), have you noticed anything different since the 1.49 update? I sometimes turn it on, depends on the car/track/event, but more often than not, I forget to turn it off. For example, I did turn it on tonight because I was doing the weekly challenges, and WTC800 was a full wet race at Fuji. After that, I went to Spa to time trial some Praiano builds and enjoy the VR experience in the sunset, and went couple of laps in the F12 berlinetta, M3 '89 swapped etc... And I thought to myself, hmm, either I became a world class road car driver overnight or these setups are so amazing... And then I remembered I didn't turn off the CSA. Drove couple of laps with it turned off, times were literally the same, I had couple of more corrections to make but noting dramatic. My point being - I didn't even notice it turned on, of course in VR you don't have the blinking red light, and I just didn't feel the artificial corrections on my wheel like I did before, I think that it was improved somehow in the update, like it's less intrusive, or the new physics have something to do with it, it's literally the steery cheat mode like you call it, behaves just like you want it, you don't lose time, and you gain (much) stability and consistency.
I'll take a wild guess - you nailed the exit of turn 3 (or 4, whatever you want to call it, the one before the two left handers).I need to find out what I did in this S2 with the 42.559.
Exactly this! Could't have explained better! But as I recall, it wasn't like that before the update, I was getting the constant "cuts" and I felt the thing doing its job all the time...But I never feel like I'm fighting it, it feels like artificial weight that I press against which is a little unusual but natural feeling at the same time.
I've been using it on and off for a long time as well and I've always had the opinion that it doesn't do anything but make the slide feel more like an actual car. I think it's great in many cars. Might as well use every available aid if it buys time. The fastest cars in the world rely on them. Why not a fake car on the Internet?A little bit off topic, but touching the subject of CSA (strong), have you noticed anything different since the 1.49 update? I sometimes turn it on, depends on the car/track/event, but more often than not, I forget to turn it off. For example, I did turn it on tonight because I was doing the weekly challenges, and WTC800 was a full wet race at Fuji. After that, I went to Spa to time trial some Praiano builds and enjoy the VR experience in the sunset, and went couple of laps in the F12 berlinetta, M3 '89 swapped etc... And I thought to myself, hmm, either I became a world class road car driver overnight or these setups are so amazing... And then I remembered I didn't turn off the CSA. Drove couple of laps with it turned off, times were literally the same, I had couple of more corrections to make but noting dramatic. My point being - I didn't even notice it turned on, of course in VR you don't have the blinking red light, and I just didn't feel the artificial corrections on my wheel like I did before, I think that it was improved somehow in the update, like it's less intrusive, or the new physics have something to do with it, it's literally the steery cheat mode like you call it, behaves just like you want it, you don't lose time, and you gain (much) stability and consistency.
To be honest I haven't turned it off for months now. To me it has always felt unintrusive. It helps tremendously in some cars, and doesn't get in the way in others. However, given that I am on track for two GTP top 10 placements in a row, which was previously unthinkable, you might have a point that CSA indeed got buffed ...A little bit off topic, but touching the subject of CSA (strong), have you noticed anything different since the 1.49 update? I sometimes turn it on, depends on the car/track/event, but more often than not, I forget to turn it off. For example, I did turn it on tonight because I was doing the weekly challenges, and WTC800 was a full wet race at Fuji. After that, I went to Spa to time trial some Praiano builds and enjoy the VR experience in the sunset, and went couple of laps in the F12 berlinetta, M3 '89 swapped etc... And I thought to myself, hmm, either I became a world class road car driver overnight or these setups are so amazing... And then I remembered I didn't turn off the CSA. Drove couple of laps with it turned off, times were literally the same, I had couple of more corrections to make but noting dramatic. My point being - I didn't even notice it turned on, of course in VR you don't have the blinking red light, and I just didn't feel the artificial corrections on my wheel like I did before, I think that it was improved somehow in the update, like it's less intrusive, or the new physics have something to do with it, it's literally the steery cheat mode like you call it, behaves just like you want it, you don't lose time, and you gain (much) stability and consistency.
Yeah, some cars really need it, in some cars it's not really much of a difference. But it can definitely ruin the "pure" experience in some specific cars, for example, I had the Carrera 904 set up for the Porsche event on Kyoto, 599pp, an amazing orgasmic experience with the controlled sliding through those fast corners, you literally cannot overdo it, you just throw it in the corner and let it slide naturally, floor the throttle and off you go, flying past all the AI cars, I was getting goosebumps while driving it in VR. CSA would for sure ruin that behaviour, you wouldn't neccesarily be slower with it turned on, but the behaviour would be so much different and "robotic" if I may call it that.I think it's great in many cars.
Or you became a world class road car driver overnight.A little bit off topic, but touching the subject of CSA (strong), have you noticed anything different since the 1.49 update? I sometimes turn it on, depends on the car/track/event, but more often than not, I forget to turn it off. For example, I did turn it on tonight because I was doing the weekly challenges, and WTC800 was a full wet race at Fuji. After that, I went to Spa to time trial some Praiano builds and enjoy the VR experience in the sunset, and went couple of laps in the F12 berlinetta, M3 '89 swapped etc... And I thought to myself, hmm, either I became a world class road car driver overnight or these setups are so amazing... And then I remembered I didn't turn off the CSA. Drove couple of laps with it turned off, times were literally the same, I had couple of more corrections to make but noting dramatic. My point being - I didn't even notice it turned on, of course in VR you don't have the blinking red light, and I just didn't feel the artificial corrections on my wheel like I did before, I think that it was improved somehow in the update, like it's less intrusive, or the new physics have something to do with it, it's literally the steery cheat mode like you call it, behaves just like you want it, you don't lose time, and you gain (much) stability and consistency.
I feel the CSA is more helpful or a good assist to have when compared to the ASM. The ASM makes the car handling worse.A little bit off topic, but touching the subject of CSA (strong), have you noticed anything different since the 1.49 update? I sometimes turn it on, depends on the car/track/event, but more often than not, I forget to turn it off. For example, I did turn it on tonight because I was doing the weekly challenges, and WTC800 was a full wet race at Fuji. After that, I went to Spa to time trial some Praiano builds and enjoy the VR experience in the sunset, and went couple of laps in the F12 berlinetta, M3 '89 swapped etc... And I thought to myself, hmm, either I became a world class road car driver overnight or these setups are so amazing... And then I remembered I didn't turn off the CSA. Drove couple of laps with it turned off, times were literally the same, I had couple of more corrections to make but noting dramatic. My point being - I didn't even notice it turned on, of course in VR you don't have the blinking red light, and I just didn't feel the artificial corrections on my wheel like I did before, I think that it was improved somehow in the update, like it's less intrusive, or the new physics have something to do with it, it's literally the steery cheat mode like you call it, behaves just like you want it, you don't lose time, and you gain (much) stability and consistency.
Funnily enough that’s exactly what I did just before bed last night, I did a fun race in the KTM X-Bow which is an absolute dream all assists off and then thought I’ll just hop in the BAC Mono for that weekly race, slapped some sports soft tyres on it and then immediately sent myself into the shadow realm T1 at Brands Hatch. I didn’t even try CSA at that point just turned the console off and went to bed, I’d seen enough 😂When you have the time - do a test, BAC Mono, stock, try it with and without CSA(s), it's actually in the weekly challenges as a special event. For me personally, completely undrivable car with all the assists off, it's like it has something broken in the suspension or somewhere, spinning if you even try to touch the fast pedal, but with CSA, it's such a joy to drive, comfy and pleasant, with just a right amount of countersteering needed, but I had 0 spins or critical situations in the Brands Hatch race.
Yup Give it a shot on the wheel with the CSA, massive difference.then thought I’ll just hop in the BAC Mono for that weekly race, slapped some sports soft tyres on it and then immediately sent myself into the shadow realm T1 at Brands Hatch
Show offAh yes, the 917 Living Legend of Understeer, nice.
View attachment 1379239
What an absolutely terrible driving experience, I hate every single characteristic of this car. Never mind the time, I just hooked it up, barely, but I won't be returning here again
Go seadog! Wet is your thing 😁Wow, I just knocked off about 5 seconds from my PB at RBR by switching from the Porsche on IMs to the Ferrari on wets after following advice here. All within a few laps and only one spinner!
Was hoping it would be enough for silver but still have nearly 4 seconds to find to get there.
Still, huge gain just by changing cars!