It is unfortunate that LFS currently misrepresents 4WD cars. The poor RB4 is the perfect example.
First thing is the engine. with max torque at 4500 rpm and max power at 6054 or so rpm, this is a horrible power curve, especially for 4WD. In fact, all the turbo road cars in LFS desperately need more realistic (aka better) torque curves. For RB4 I suggest 330nm@3500 and 250hp@6500 with cutoff at 7500rpm.
Second thing is the gearbox. All 3 turbo cars should be given 6 speed manuals, not the horrible 5 speeds that make close ratio sets impossible without ridiculously low top speeds. The unrealisticly narrow powerbands make this an even more pressing issue. For goodness sake, even a 2005 corolla sportivo has a 6sp gearbox.
Third thing is the ridiculously fast FWD, the FXO. Yes, it is realistically supposed to be the lightest of the 3. But its true speed secret is those massivley oversized tires. If the RB4 was tired similiarly with all else unchanged, it would destroy all the other 2 cars on any twisty technical circuit through superior grip and traction. Even with the first 2 alterations mentioned above applied to all 3 cars, the RB4 would be the overall winner even if its power to weight ratio ends up slightly less than the other 2. Curently, the RB4 is relatively undertired.
Finally, please make a proper rally version of the RB4 to eliminate the current neglect experienced by the rallycross circuits. LFS does have the potential to make even rival or beat RBR's realism.
FYI, the Audi A4 was kicked out of GT racing due to the inherent "unfair advantage" their Quattro system presents.
Imagine if F-1 cars were allowed 4wd while maintaining their current weight and power levels. Traction control would be effectively obsolete. The fact is, even the current V8s are massively overpowering the rear tires.
In fact, F-1 specifically banned 4WDs due to the potential unfair advantages of a properly develpoed system. Imagine if F-1 cars had WRC style electronic diffs. Why waste 2 wheels with 2WD when 4WD could make the most out of the tires' potential? With current materials technology, drivetrain weight is a non-issue for 4WD since current cars all run underweight anyway. Weight distribution even closer to the ideal 50/50 helps too.
First thing is the engine. with max torque at 4500 rpm and max power at 6054 or so rpm, this is a horrible power curve, especially for 4WD. In fact, all the turbo road cars in LFS desperately need more realistic (aka better) torque curves. For RB4 I suggest 330nm@3500 and 250hp@6500 with cutoff at 7500rpm.
Second thing is the gearbox. All 3 turbo cars should be given 6 speed manuals, not the horrible 5 speeds that make close ratio sets impossible without ridiculously low top speeds. The unrealisticly narrow powerbands make this an even more pressing issue. For goodness sake, even a 2005 corolla sportivo has a 6sp gearbox.
Third thing is the ridiculously fast FWD, the FXO. Yes, it is realistically supposed to be the lightest of the 3. But its true speed secret is those massivley oversized tires. If the RB4 was tired similiarly with all else unchanged, it would destroy all the other 2 cars on any twisty technical circuit through superior grip and traction. Even with the first 2 alterations mentioned above applied to all 3 cars, the RB4 would be the overall winner even if its power to weight ratio ends up slightly less than the other 2. Curently, the RB4 is relatively undertired.
Finally, please make a proper rally version of the RB4 to eliminate the current neglect experienced by the rallycross circuits. LFS does have the potential to make even rival or beat RBR's realism.
FYI, the Audi A4 was kicked out of GT racing due to the inherent "unfair advantage" their Quattro system presents.
Imagine if F-1 cars were allowed 4wd while maintaining their current weight and power levels. Traction control would be effectively obsolete. The fact is, even the current V8s are massively overpowering the rear tires.
In fact, F-1 specifically banned 4WDs due to the potential unfair advantages of a properly develpoed system. Imagine if F-1 cars had WRC style electronic diffs. Why waste 2 wheels with 2WD when 4WD could make the most out of the tires' potential? With current materials technology, drivetrain weight is a non-issue for 4WD since current cars all run underweight anyway. Weight distribution even closer to the ideal 50/50 helps too.