Just a question: Is the open-diff behavior thought to be realistic or was its development neglected because nobody uses it anyway (exept for UF1-drivers)?
Correct me if I'm wrong - but most production FWDs do have open diffs, right? So which ones of these do rev up like mad in a tight (or even not so tight) turn sending all the enginepower to the inner wheel leaving you almost without any propulsion (is that the word?) and a lot (just way too much) understeer. LFS does exactly this, which I NEVER experienced in RL... and I'm definitely no stranger to chasing FWDs (including a '96 Cinquecento with a very short wheelbase) thru upwards serpentines - fighting against powerundersteer of course, but it's never that hilarious.
Anyone RL experience with a behavior like that?
Correct me if I'm wrong - but most production FWDs do have open diffs, right? So which ones of these do rev up like mad in a tight (or even not so tight) turn sending all the enginepower to the inner wheel leaving you almost without any propulsion (is that the word?) and a lot (just way too much) understeer. LFS does exactly this, which I NEVER experienced in RL... and I'm definitely no stranger to chasing FWDs (including a '96 Cinquecento with a very short wheelbase) thru upwards serpentines - fighting against powerundersteer of course, but it's never that hilarious.
Anyone RL experience with a behavior like that?