its not really a bug.. but it does seem that when drifting the GT now runs out of power at the high end easier. like it needs another 50-75hp.. to get the new tyres to slide longer..
you mean the tires have to much grip and its harder to get sideways, anyway, its the torque that it needs, and i always thought relying on a turbo to always give it to me is a stupid idea, thus i drive the F750 if i wanna drift
245hp and about 250lbft of torque powering a 1400kg car around the corners is barely sufficient. Try maxing the air pressure and apply proper weight shift technique, it should be better.
sidenote: as if my RB4 has enough power, i can still drift it.
theres nothing wrong with that car...in fact i find it absolutly perfect for any racing situation ...even drifting >.> i don't like the FZ50...its too...somethin (i think its the exhaust size it scares me ) but i can drift that too lol
hey, i thought it did that because that's what it said. Eventually i figured it didn't do tat after a month. But i still have no clue or thesis on what it does
Don't maen to be argumentative but if he's running out of grunt at the top end shouldn't it be more power and not torque he needs (all else being equal). I would have thought the torque would have peaked 2-3,000rpm ago and it now the power that's keeping the drift going...or not as the case may be?
I understand the relationship just that at high rpms it's power not torque, or am I mistaken.
To explain a bit better what I mean: try drifting a RWD diesel (turbo or not). It has lots of torque (compared to bhp) but lacks power so it's difficult to maintain a drift when the rpms increase. Now try a RWD petrol (turbo or not). This has more power than the diesel and so can maintain a drift better when the rpms increase.
So if the guy's running out of grunt top end it's the power that's limiting, not the torque?
Not mistaken, just over simplified. You have torque and power at all rpms, so to say power is at high rpms and torque is at low ones is to miss the point.
But to get the top end power you need to up the top end torque. If you up the mid range torque you improve the midrange torque. But if you increase top end torque (and power) you might find mid range torque (and power) is sacrificed.
You never get something for nothing.
Diesels work best at lower RPMs (their peak efficiency is towards the lower end of most rev counters) and thus develop lots of torque low down. At higher revs they don't work very well, and so don't make a great deal of power (low torque and medium revs = low power).