The online racing simulator
setup in s2
2
(34 posts, started )
Quote from geeman1 :In my opinion setups should be even more limited than they are now, especially on the road cars. I am somewhat annoyed about the fact that some you can make 'unrealistic' setups which make cars like XFG and FXO behave weird, like oversteer under power etc.

The oversteer on power issue in FWD cars is there with practically any setup (I haven't tried one that doesn't have it from default onwards ), my belief is it is a tyre phusics issue not a setup issue
Quote from B2B@300 :The oversteer on power issue in FWD cars is there with practically any setup (I haven't tried one that doesn't have it from default onwards ), my belief is it is a tyre phusics issue not a setup issue

All fast setups have it because it's better. The issue might originate from some small physics bug, but it's the ability to setup the car so much makes it easy to take advantage of the bug.
Oversteer in FWD on power? I've yet to see this. I got send a setup that supposedly did this, and found plenty of understeer off the throttle, and yes, less understeer under power. But oversteer? No way. Barely neutral.

Perhaps Colcob will analyse slip angles and prove this.
Quote from Bob Smith :Oversteer in FWD on power? I've yet to see this. I got send a setup that supposedly did this, and found plenty of understeer off the throttle, and yes, less understeer under power. But oversteer? No way. Barely neutral.

Perhaps Colcob will analyse slip angles and prove this.

You don't like FWD's so you probably haven't driven them enough to find how

It is more a technique, than anything else, to get the most of this effect... when powering out of a corner in a FWD at the same time gradually straighten the wheels (even if you need more turn angle) and you will find that the car will turn better

In other words if you find yourself understeering on power out of a corner simply straighten your wheels slighty and the understeer will disapear
Quote from B2B@300 :You don't like FWD's so you probably haven't driven them enough to find how

It is more a technique, than anything else, to get the most of this effect... when powering out of a corner in a FWD at the same time gradually straighten the wheels (even if you need more turn angle) and you will find that the car will turn better

In other words if you find yourself understeering on power out of a corner simply straighten your wheels slighty and the understeer will disapear

I wouldn't call that oversteer, it is correcting understeer.
Quote from mrodgers :I wouldn't call that oversteer, it is correcting understeer.

I agree it correct technique for correcting understeer but it works a little too well not sure though
#32 - axus
You can get any car's arse to slide out of a corner. I've been doing some research on this for a project I'm working on. Here are the equations for slip angles:



Delta (that reversed 6-like thing) is the steering angle of the wheel and sgn(x) = -1 for x < 0, sgn(x) = 0 for x = 0 and sgn(x) = 1 for x > 1. Omega (that w-esque thing) is angular velocity and b and c are the Forward distance between the Center of Gravity of the car and the wheel (ie. only on the Y axis) like so:



If the slip angles at the back are greater than those at the front, you will get oversteer. I'd say it is a corner entry techniqe where you have quite a low brake balance (ie. more brakes on the rear) and the car enters a corner with slight oversteer. Then using differential settings, you can keep the slight slide maintained for a while using differential settings. You will however find that the sideslip angle of the car:




is decreasing gradually.

Source: http://home.planet.nl/~monstrous/tutcar.html
Quote from axus :If the slip angles at the back are greater than those at the front, you will get oversteer. I'd say it is a corner entry techniqe where you have quite a low brake balance (ie. more brakes on the rear) and the car enters a corner with slight oversteer. Then using differential settings, you can keep the slight slide maintained for a while using differential settings.

Not really sure what you are trying to tell us axus but the effect I'm talking about is in the last phase of the corner and I also use it to tuck the nose in just before the apex (i.e. apply a little throttle to reduce understeer). I don't get any sliding of the rear that I'm aware of, but the GTi often has the inside rear wheel off the ground just before the appex and mid corner .
Quote from Matrixi :PS. What is it with you and all your anti-drift thing anyway? Some people enjoy racing, some enjoy drifting, some (like me) enjoy them both. No harm done? No need to bitch about it whenever the chance.

That "drifting simulation" reputation that LFS kind of has is starting to turn against the game.
2

setup in s2
(34 posts, started )
FGED GREDG RDFGDR GSFDG