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got an s2, now what?
(10 posts, started )
got an s2, now what?
i got an s2 liscense, but now i dont know any tracks to drift, cant drift very well any more (xrt is hard to setup because it oversteers a LOT by itself) and even if i find a good drifting track, i couldnt use it because i wouldnt be able to memorise anything. so what is the best drifting track? and how should i practice every car? (i also like grip racing, but it does not need you to memorise your track first as much)

thank you
Quote from logitekg25 :i got an s2 liscense, but now i dont know any tracks to drift, cant drift very well any more (xrt is hard to setup because it oversteers a LOT by itself) and even if i find a good drifting track, i couldnt use it because i wouldnt be able to memorise anything. so what is the best drifting track? and how should i practice every car? (i also like grip racing, but it does not need you to memorise your track first as much)

thank you

if you like to drift more than race the popular tracks are Fern Bay, Kyoto and South City but it may have changed as i'm a racer now and those were what was popular when i was drifting back in the day. and the most popular car is XRT and then FZ5 but FZ5 is more for power sliding and XRT is slow nice drifting i think. But in short Learn every track
You can drift on any track, it doesnt take a special track to drift on it, drifting.. is just sliding your car.. so.. if there is pavement, you can probably drift it!

Check out inferno setups (search google) there are a lot of awesome race and drift setups on that website that are available for download.

Also.. you memorize tracks by driving on them whether you like it or no, I havent raced on FE Black for probably 2 years now and I still know every turn, every brake zone and every gear and zones, you just have to drive it.. it isnt a hard thing, plus why do you say you dont want to memorize a track?

Also you have to know a track just as much either way, for racing you have to know brake and throttle and turn in zones, drifting you really just have to pay attention to your speeds and turn in zones, meaning.. they're pretty much exactly the same..

Also.. welcome to Live for Speed!
5 laps and you have the track well enough in your head to know how it turns, a few more for brake zones and off you go.
Any track can be drifted, some are more fun than others.
If you want to get into drifting the more powerful cars, take the RB4 and find a drift setup for it, because it's 4WD the drift is more controalable. That's how i got into it anyway. I've attatched a simple layout for you to practice changing direction whilst drifting.
Attached files
BL1R_DriftRun.lyt - 252 B - 135 views
Quote from XCNuse :You can drift on any track, it doesnt take a special track to drift on it, drifting.. is just sliding your car.. so.. if there is pavement, you can probably drift it!

Check out inferno setups (search google) there are a lot of awesome race and drift setups on that website that are available for download.

Also.. you memorize tracks by driving on them whether you like it or no, I havent raced on FE Black for probably 2 years now and I still know every turn, every brake zone and every gear and zones, you just have to drive it.. it isnt a hard thing, plus why do you say you dont want to memorize a track?

Also you have to know a track just as much either way, for racing you have to know brake and throttle and turn in zones, drifting you really just have to pay attention to your speeds and turn in zones, meaning.. they're pretty much exactly the same..

Also.. welcome to Live for Speed!

i dont know why i said i dont want to memorise tracks and i will google that inferno thing
#7 - VoiD
XRT and XRG are better for drifting, FZ5 is better for powersliding.

no track is better for drift, each are good in there own ways for different reasons. although my tip would be to stay away from aston as its just not as flowing for drift as other tracks, and westhill as a beginner as it takes a bit more advanced skill to drift it properly
Quote from nisskid :XRT and XRG are better for drifting, FZ5 is better for powersliding.

no track is better for drift, each are good in there own ways for different reasons. although my tip would be to stay away from aston as its just not as flowing for drift as other tracks, and westhill as a beginner as it takes a bit more advanced skill to drift it properly

ok thx...now just to remember that

got an s2, now what?
(10 posts, started )
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