ATTESA VS Quattro (ATTESA haters learn your powertrains)
#32
^Steve, you have noidea the s*** i have to deal with in my S, if i have VDC on, it will just kick in every time i try to get it moving, the result of that is 0 acceleration. So i have to turn VDC off, and the result of that is rear wheel spinning like crazy and i get somewhere while drifting thru every corner i take.
But i must admit, it's a lot of fun when i get it right, but sometimes it can get a bit hairy.
If there is snow around when we meet i will take you out for a ride in my S, and you can experience what it's like to drift thru corners on the streets
But i must admit, it's a lot of fun when i get it right, but sometimes it can get a bit hairy.
If there is snow around when we meet i will take you out for a ride in my S, and you can experience what it's like to drift thru corners on the streets
#33
Disagree 100%
I've owned AWD vehicles with all-season tires that were MUCH better than a 2WD car with snow tires.
Today's snow tires are fantastic, but having two of them on the drive wheels of a 2WD car isn't as good as having four decent all-season tires on a good AWD system. Not even close.
I've owned AWD vehicles with all-season tires that were MUCH better than a 2WD car with snow tires.
Today's snow tires are fantastic, but having two of them on the drive wheels of a 2WD car isn't as good as having four decent all-season tires on a good AWD system. Not even close.
#34
Next thing you'll tell us is that you cracked two engine blocks. Or maybe two cylinder heads.
#39
Registered User
iTrader: (1)
This actually brings the thread semi back on topic.
It was from running at the track, Auto Club Speedway to be exact in the Roval configuration, which includes turns 1 and 2 on the banked oval, which I take at roughly 125-130.
Here's some semi melted brake pad to go with it.
It was from running at the track, Auto Club Speedway to be exact in the Roval configuration, which includes turns 1 and 2 on the banked oval, which I take at roughly 125-130.
Here's some semi melted brake pad to go with it.
#41
Registered User
iTrader: (1)
Those pads pictured above have a fade point of "2000+". I'm not sure how far past that you have to go to actually get the pads to do what I did. I still need brake ducts. For reference, Project Mu B-Force pads are rated fade resistant up to about 930 degrees.
I buy my cars to drive them. I also maintain them in accordance with how they're driven. If you haven't encountered such problems on track in your M3, then you're not driving fast enough. This was all done with far less hp than a G37.
I'm still waiting to see what the OP has to say about taking a cloverleaf onramp at 90-100. He never mentioned units, and I'll be disappointed if he says 90-100 kph.
I buy my cars to drive them. I also maintain them in accordance with how they're driven. If you haven't encountered such problems on track in your M3, then you're not driving fast enough. This was all done with far less hp than a G37.
I'm still waiting to see what the OP has to say about taking a cloverleaf onramp at 90-100. He never mentioned units, and I'll be disappointed if he says 90-100 kph.
#43
Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: San Jose, CA
Posts: 57
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Also, the fact that I live in CA now tells you little about my driving history. Maybe I used to live in Alaska? (I didn't, but I used to live in Canada).
#44
Banned
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Useful > Useless, all day, everyday
Posts: 476
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
He had a chance to correct that when I first "questioned" him on it, with a pic of a typical cloverleaf to be sure we were talking about the same type of corner. He has not been logged in since a little while after the other posts started coming in questioning his claimed speed on cloverleafs.
shoggy, don't you dare try to now say that you were talking about Kilometers Per Mile.
I personally like the fwd bias because when your on clover leafs at 125mph and start to under steer off the ramp the rear tires would kick in giving the little extra oversteer to keep the car turning instead of shooting straight off the road. If that is not enough then you can trail break it and save yourself with ease.