Car does have quite weak clutch, when car gets up into air, you need to back of from throttle as when car lands and you have huge amount of rpm it is either tires or clutch that are going to slip and as clutch can handle so little amount of torque it is clutch that will slip, solution is to lift a bit when you get airborne so that revs don't run higher than they would when tires are in full contact with ground.
I really do hate FWD and I can't drive it fast, but I'm sure you won't loose too much time doing that, also it is same for everyone
Clutch should handle 10-15% more torque perhaps or maybe fault is somewhere else?
Anyway I agree that there is some fault as it is mostly tires that should spin in such situation where you have lot of revs and car lands to ground.
I think that 10-15% is not even close to enough. Even very light vehicles with weak engines have clutches that can withstand hundreds of pounds of torque. You might blow a clutch plate into tiny pieces, but it's probably not going to slip unless you slip it a lot and overheat the clutch during use. Clutches just don't slip like they currently do in LFS. Aftermarket clutches and (at least some) race clutches are even LESS likely to slip because they use a very "sticky" material and they use centrifugal force to increase clamping power (the faster you rev, the tighter they grab).
Clutches should overheat and slip IF people are slipping them during launch or riding the clutch a lot. They should not slip at all when the pedal is being released normally, even if the driver is powershifting.
If you rev a car and dump the clutch, there are a few possibilities of what would normally happen:
1) The tires break loose
2) The tires grip and the engine bogs or dies
3) The clutch, rear end, U-joint, or something else breaks
4) The clutch slips
I've never in my life seen #4 happen before #1-3. In fact, the only time I've ever seen a clutch slip is when it gets very old and worn or when it's slipped several times in a row during launches. #4 should never happen on an unmodded car without slipping the clutch a lot, because your clutch should always be able to withstand more torque than your engine can produce.
A smart man once said that as racing sims get better, controling the car will get easier because it will feel more natural. People slide around all the time in real life so why shouldn't you be able to in a simulator?
That is how slow I am with that car, I hate that car
South city chicane and gravel courses seem to initiate this problem as tires get bit light/air in those, engine speeds up and when tires bite clutch slips, maybe some other bumpy South city courses too, but haven't now driven those.
This i kinda wierd. i was was makin a setup for the BMW ok set the fuel at 6% for a 5 lap race. I raced a bit, then quit and went to a different server and i picked a diffrent car. Wierd thing is, is that the fuel i set for the BMW was on this car too. I thought, Did I set it to this? No No, not possible i never put 6% fuel in GTR's. I at least put 50%.
Anyone else have this Problem?
edit: pit tyre change was changed to what i had on the BMW too.
Those are things which are not related to the setup in any way. They might be in the setup screen but they are not part of the setup (file). You should really know that by now with a join date like that
As far as i understood it, the temprature and wear settings are now more realistic so you should do something with your setups (add more preasure for instance) / driving technique (do not oversteer that much, meaning when you are losing grip inside a turn, more turn wont do the job but less speed).
Read the improvements list:
Physics :
- Racing tyres generate more heat and wear more quickly
Tyres R1, R2 and R3 now heat up a little more quickly and wear more quickly. The tiny bit of increased heating also results in a tiny bit more rolling resistance. If your tyres are overheating, you should use the next R number up - that is intended.
All other tyres and all other aspects of tyre physics are not changed.
quickly is an euphemism
It seems crazy when you see track racers (irl) warming up their tires violently, or seeing rallymen going sideways in hundreds of corners ; in LFS after 3 corners your tires are gone if do not drive like a grandmother