i think the cars should all originally have rev limiter's built into them - i know of this in reality as i go to drifts, autotests, rallies and all different things and when hitting high revs any car hits the limiter, even my micra can!!! (equivalent to xrg)
Well, we could have had 150hp, but it would have taken a VERY skilled driver to make use of it. At clubman level there is more time to be found in drivability than in headline power figures.
Your point was that 1.3s shouldn't produce much power I believe. They can and do.
Easy. We had 130hp at 6500. If you think our 7500 self-imposed rev limit was too high (it wasn't), then let's say 7000 is more 'sensible'. With a slightly milder cam, or a tweak to the induction/exhaust system it would be EASILY possible to get 115hp at 6000rpm, probably even lower. The engine would be even less peaky, and optimum gear change points would be around 6600rpm as a guess with our gearing.
Not necessarily.
So, as I said before, don't make claims that you can't back up.
so then you could trade ideal shiftpoint and best acceleration against endurance... and set your limiter accordingly, maybe with the option to disable it completely during race.
as for the limiter's behavior itself: I don't care too much, as I don't want to hit it anyway. newer cars' limiters are very smooth though.[/quote]
The limiter you speak of in the VR6 and Nissan are similar to the lfs limiter but, they do not just stay exactly on the limit and stay there with no change in revs what so ever, no matter what the conditions. These are two cars I have tried so I know this from experience.
I know the limiter in lfs is probably the perfect limiter for a racing car but most road cars do not have this.
No that is after fire caused by unburnt fuel getting into the exhaust and igniting, and is often accompanied by a visual display of flames. If the rev limiter was hit in the process of a downshift then the shift would have been far too early and would only audibly engage the limiter during the throttle blip, which is only momentary.
Race engines run a lot of overlap (inlet and exhaust valves open at the same time near top dead centre on the inlet/exhaust strokes), and tend to maintain fuelling on the overrun (off the gas) to keep exhaust gas temperatures and valve/cylinder temperatures under control (and because it improves pick-up a bit too). The fuel can go straight in the inlet valve and straight out of the exhaust valve, where the temperatures can be enough to ignite the fuel and cause pops and flames.
Ideally you don't really want it, if only because the shock waves aren't great for exhaust longevity, but some people reckon the gains are worth the costs. I tend towards no popping and coughing if I can help it, but sometimes throttle response degrades too far (in a track environment - you'd never EVER notice it on the roads) to get rid of it completely.
Listen closely when I tag the limiter in 1st gear. It's just for a slight moment, before I shift. Burbles right off 6500. It's also audibly noticeable by the change in engine tone [it becomes rough in quick succession, not smooth]. Never once has this car dipped-then-revved while hitting the limiter, it's always a smooth 6500 revs, no more, no less.
Now, go into LFS and redline the XRT, for example. Sounds pretty close to identical, to me. Maybe it's my driving habits at the limiter that create this difference in opinion [trust me, I spend a LOT of time on the limiter, 3rd gear is too tall for some of the twisty roads I tackle and 2nd is just too short ].
actually i would like a proper rev limiter too, it gives these cars more realistic feeling, i don't even think they sound now that they have a rev limiter at all!
it's like: wrooorrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr.
Sounds like that, it's not realistic at all.
it should go like wroooootoootootootoootootototootootootootootootoo.
(funny)
And in racing cars like xrr and so one would have a racing limiter, like real fast misfiring sound, wrototototototototototototototototototo...
About those rev limiters... cars have different type of limiters.. lfs has many different cars... so why should not limiter be different between different cars in LFS...
just my 5cents
Mini Coopers (the new ones) actually adjust their engine timing when you're off the throttle above 2500 RPM, and the same effect is achieved. You can hear it quite clearly in this video - I blew my exhaust apart taking the fabled Dragon too hard, and the "burbles" sound like gunshots :P http://www.facebook.com/v/163194687361
Mini Coopers also have a newer type of rev limiter, similar to what the new Fiat Punto has - it's referred to as a "soft" limiter. BMW employed this on the MINI because it has an electronic throttle, and it's much more forgiving when shifting at the limit. Example: the prequel to the video above. You'll hear the MINI hit redline several times in this video... http://www.facebook.com/v/163005357361
I think the entire point of this topic was to request an annoying limiter like that noisy Bee*R one, can we just let the LFS cars be LFS cars? They have the perfect limiter, if you're going through a corner sideways ideally you shouldn't even need to be hitting your redline.
+1 to a proper rev limiter. I don't really like the current one much, it just sounds like it doesn't have a rev limited just at lower revs. Burnouts and drifts would sound so much rice-ier better with rev limiter sounds.