No, but I'll see if I can find time soon. The trouble is that I do a lot of rF2 league racing (I keep trying to cut back, but then I fill in the...
So, it doesn't support my opinions? Interesting! You think I'm trying to impress people? I wonder what you think I'll gain from this? I guess you...
One of my first statements was that lift-off oversteer was not snap oversteer, you're right, and the reason I said it is that it is not a given...
Lift-off oversteer (also known as snap-oversteer, trailing-throttle oversteer, throttle off oversteer, or lift-throttle oversteer) is a form of...
And the hammer drops again to squash the revolt - ironically Soviet!
I don't have any onboards, but I can get some for you when I get a moment. I'm pretty busy with league racing, and funnily my next race is GTE at...
I saw a video this morning showing proof of lift-off oversteer in AMS2, and it involved setting the car up to oversteer as much as possible in a...
I don't think of it as a childish retort, more an expression of exasperation. I was just fed up trying to explain why I thought the two things...
I'm not going to continue this because you're not worth the effort.
Just to jog your memory, this was my first post (note paragraph three). Glass houses! What are you on?
I was arguing that lifting causes weight transfer and slip angle changes that tighten the line, and in one of my very early posts I mentioned that...
Well that's simple to answer - it's because the weight transfer causes it to understeer less! Why are you of the opinion that I think it is always...
Well, I'm glad you understand what I'm getting at, so this hasn't been a total waste of time. You say there is only one context, but the...
Plain old steering - I like that! Plain old steering is just grip generated from slip angles, the grip being a function of the tyres' normal...
Do you mean by natural deceleration that due to lifting? Any deceleration causes a weight transfer, and since grip is proportional to normal...
From the links you posted it seems that lift-off oversteer is any amount of oversteer that results from lifting off the throttle, so it can be...
I wouldn't say that nobody wants lift-off oversteer, instead I'd say that nobody wants snap oversteer, and while lift-off oversteer can lead to...
So, to be clear, the term 'lift-off oversteer' is only ever applicable when the throttle is fully closed? A partial throttle closure does not ever...
I've just been reading through this thread, and it was an interesting read. I noticed that there seems to be some confusion regarding terminology...
I just saw it, and it sounded like a fairly genuine account of a typical journey through time falling into and out of love as you go. Let's face...
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