rs = my opinion will probably get me in trouble here lol.
What really makes me laugh is when people couple rs with aids... That's like hoisting a flag saying that you can't drive. Lol. Get some self respect.
What you showed is a F1 car with grooved tires.
If a skilled F10 user could do a comparison between the real life F10 and the GT5 version on the various racing compounds, it could help somewhat. But do bare in mind the 2010 Bridgestone tires were like concrete, and due to a lack of a 2011 F1 in GT5 we cant test GT5 tires vs modern Pirelli F1 tires.
EDIT: To answer the thread, there is nothing wrong with them imo. The amount of elitism thrown around is ridiculous. You only drive the Ring in the Yellow Bird using Comfort Hards? Good for you!
Those that claim it is no fun, you are wrong, stop portraying your opinion as fact. I have had more fun with a tuned Prius on Racing Softs on tight tracks than I probably ever will with 'pro' tires on X supercar.
The only car I use Comfort Tires is the X2010 and X2011, Comfort Hards make it far less twitchy so I have an easier time controlling it, and thus get quicker and more consistent lap times.
On some sports cars I will hapily use Sport Soft, and use the other racing tires on mid ranged race cars, but I prefer RS on most.
And as was said above, a great driver is a great driver, no matter what tire he uses. A noob is still a noob, no matter the tire.
Check this out: (Done on Comfort Soft tires)
White & NerdyAs I recall, they're pretty much the online standard. I use them on road cars without shame.
While I agree that it takes skill to drive cars fast on RS, I believe it's a different skill than is required to drive on sports/comfort tires.
The skills required to drive ultra fast on RS is akin more to the skills required to be fast on NFS or Burnouts moreso than the skills required to be fast in a real race car or simulator.
On RS you are full throttle so much, that the game becomes more of a point/shoot/brake routine, and far less of a simulator where the goal is to simultaneously adjust all of your cars input in order to manipulate your cars mechanical grip.
On crap tires there is more involved in terms of who can get their power down quicker, instead of who can turn in at the exact perfect time. As a result, qualifying times are often much more diversified on crummy tires because there is a ton of finesse and skill required to nail a turn exit; finesse that is not necessarily required with the same car on RS.
Lastly, IMO of course, RS completely kills the handling traits of road cars and makes them all feel very similar. Weight transfer is far less important, and if you bomb into a turn too fast it's easy easier to correct the issue without loosing massive amounts of time.
grogOne important thing to note about racing tires compared to sport/comfort tires is that while they offer much more grip they also have the potential to snap oversteer. Where the other tires tend to slide gently in a more controllable way.
So while the sport and comfort tires provide less grip than racing tires I believe they are more forgiving.
hahahaha +1000000000000000000000000000000
It's not just about fun or not fun. I'm sure people using controllers can still have fun on racing softs, the problem is all the noobs who use them 100% of the time when that is completely unnecessary.
Not to mention, this is a simulator. I just don't see the point of playing a sim that way, with no regard or care for realism at all. The biggest reason racing soft tires disgust us is because it makes GT5 seem like an arcade game. They're just TOO GRIPPY, on any car. They're unrealistic, and it's one thing if you controller players need a little extra help to drive a zonda R, or a Mclaren F1 race car, but it's just pathetic to see that some controller guys use racing softs on 400pp cars, WITH TCS and SKID RECOVERY!!!! That's just something else entirely.
It's not "tire elitism", it's a respect for the simulator, something you racing soft junkies simply don't have.
If you really like that kind of racing, no challenge at all, easy as pie, driving unrealistically fast, go play forza or grid.
I did this recently, I used what he has of the tune that is listed, same car, comfort softs and made some minor changes to the default lsd and suspension settings and I've been able to get down to a 1:49 and some tenths
I did this recently, I used what he has of the tune that is listed, same car, comfort softs and made some minor changes to the default lsd and suspension settings and I've been able to get down to a 1:49 and some tenths
THE funny thing about this is one night my friends and I had the same car running with similar tune and we were taking turns seeing who could do the hot lap and reset the ghost on SPA. Those times were saved for spa in practice mode and we were using racing soft and the time was 1:59 and some tenths and I was able to blow that time out of the water in my first lap with the comfort softs.
I since tried the formula gran turismo with default tune and a lil more top end so it wouldn't hit rev limiter down the long strait and the FGT drives amazing on comfort softs as well.
I'm going to try to get some friends together in a room, distribute the tune to everybody and run comfort softs and have a hell of a formula race. I did stints up to 8 laps with tire wear on with both cars and they still held firmly and had very good feedback.
While I agree that it takes skill to drive cars fast on RS, I believe it's a different skill than is required to drive on sports/comfort tires.
The skills required to drive ultra fast on RS is akin more to the skills required to be fast on NFS or Burnouts moreso than the skills required to be fast in a real race car or simulator.
On RS you are full throttle so much, that the game becomes more of a point/shoot/brake routine, and far less of a simulator where the goal is to simultaneously adjust all of your cars input in order to manipulate your cars mechanical grip.
On crap tires there is more involved in terms of who can get their power down quicker, instead of who can turn in at the exact perfect time. As a result, qualifying times are often much more diversified on crummy tires because there is a ton of finesse and skill required to nail a turn exit; finesse that is not necessarily required with the same car on RS.
Lastly, IMO of course, RS completely kills the handling traits of road cars and makes them all feel very similar. Weight transfer is far less important, and if you bomb into a turn too fast it's easy easier to correct the issue without loosing massive amounts of time.
I can't help but lol at this, seriously.
First of all, is there any actual substance to this 'Racing Soft are to grippy', or is it just that they have alot of grip full stop? Comparing to real life is nigh on impossible as the only cars that run slicks are race cars. Race cars generally run alot of downforce, and downforce is not correctly modeled in GT5 (maximum is ALWAYS best unless on SS RX/R7). And that doesnt include the possibility of the relative downforce levels of cars in GT5 being wrong. (Group C with as much downforce as an LMP...?)
Everything happens so much slower on low grip tyres that, although the car steps out more often it is much easier to react to it and save it. On Racing Soft, if the same thing happens, you must react much quicker or you're off.
It may just be my style, but I find on Racing Softs that it is extremely easy to counter steer a little to much and shoot off in the other direction, yet I dont belive I have ever had this problem on low grip tyres.
They require skill to drive fast. That is not something anyone should try and counter. It requires a different skill to driving on Comfort Softs yes, but that does not make them 'easy as pie'...
Where can I find the tune for the Ferrari Spa lap - I would love to have a go at this too.
It's funny, any track that Ive ran either my Ferrari formulas or fgt in practice mode on racing softs prior with the times saved in, they are now easily beat!
R1600TurboWas quite sad over the weekend I tried for 30 minutes to find a 500pp room that I could have some fun in, but couldn't find one that wasn't using Racing Soft tires. Gets a bit frustrating really.
Needless to say that I can't wait for all these people that are used to running Racing Soft tires on their cars to complain about the tires that will be used during GT Academy.![]()
Was quite sad over the weekend I tried for 30 minutes to find a 500pp room that I could have some fun in, but couldn't find one that wasn't using Racing Soft tires. Gets a bit frustrating really.
Needless to say that I can't wait for all these people that are used to running Racing Soft tires on their cars to complain about the tires that will be used during GT Academy.![]()
barmyclown is going to win it since he thinks it's more difficult to drive with RS![]()
But how do you know your at 100%, there is no gauge to tell you
I disagree. For example, I believe it takes a lot more skill to get 100% out of Yellowbird on comfort or sports tires, than it does to get 100% out of it on racing tires.
Same applies to virtually every car.
I have noticed that when I have some very tough competition in a Racing Soft lounge, most of those same people can be beaten on a sunday drive when you restrict them to comfort tires. Fitting racing softs to a car, especially road legal cars, is a bit like turning Speed Recovery Force on to 300%. It very much levels out the playing field.
Like someone else said, RS tires is just like pointing and shooting. It takes a lot more effort and skill when you have to delicately balance a car's weight, power and grip, as if the steering wheel and pedals are made out of butterfly wings.