Hi.
Respect Scawen Victor and Eric.
You seem the only people in this brunch who understand car physics. Congrats on the tires improvement, it's a really a major change. Having raced on S1 and S2 (unfortunatelly only demo as far) for some years now and beeing a driver in reality i'd have one suggestion regarding the car reaction when stepping off the gas pedal. Real race-tuned car will brake with the engine then. S2 lacks that. I understand that strong braking after taking the foot off the throttle could be a nightmare for mouse racers when going trough corners as the RWD cars would most likely loose grip of the rear wheels then. That's why i'd suggest an additonal engine-braking bar setup with which everyone could set as they find suitable(basically in real race cars that can be regulated). Engine braking is very important for the car dynamics. After engine braking, engine regains underpressure in the inake manifolds which makes it release more torque after stepping on the throttle again afterwards. Also higher engine rpm in rwd cars with the engine placed lenghtways stabilises it on the corners which is qiute hard to prove but can be easily felt when driving a real vehicle.
Pour some life in the engine reactions and the driving expirience will be even more enjoyable.
Congrats once again.
(im reeling from shock that these days someone aims not only for money and remains so devoted to the customes relasing so many good impovements)

Respect Scawen Victor and Eric.
You seem the only people in this brunch who understand car physics. Congrats on the tires improvement, it's a really a major change. Having raced on S1 and S2 (unfortunatelly only demo as far) for some years now and beeing a driver in reality i'd have one suggestion regarding the car reaction when stepping off the gas pedal. Real race-tuned car will brake with the engine then. S2 lacks that. I understand that strong braking after taking the foot off the throttle could be a nightmare for mouse racers when going trough corners as the RWD cars would most likely loose grip of the rear wheels then. That's why i'd suggest an additonal engine-braking bar setup with which everyone could set as they find suitable(basically in real race cars that can be regulated). Engine braking is very important for the car dynamics. After engine braking, engine regains underpressure in the inake manifolds which makes it release more torque after stepping on the throttle again afterwards. Also higher engine rpm in rwd cars with the engine placed lenghtways stabilises it on the corners which is qiute hard to prove but can be easily felt when driving a real vehicle.
Pour some life in the engine reactions and the driving expirience will be even more enjoyable.
Congrats once again.
(im reeling from shock that these days someone aims not only for money and remains so devoted to the customes relasing so many good impovements)



People refer engine braking to only what's happening after they switch to a lower gear, that is caused by simply the difference between the engine RPM and what the wheels trought increased cluch transmision ration are forcing it to go. The braking i meant has different reason and is applied by the change in ignition timing phase as soon as you stop pushing gas pedal (the phase of ingintion is then acutally so much shifted back that the pistons are beeing pushed back down yet before they reach their higher point) . Actually the whole process takes a bit of additional fuel (that's why "city cars" wont react like that- economy.
You said that was in 4th gear, which on most 5 speeds is a 1:1 ratio, so you could test it with a 1:1 ratio in LFS also, assuming the same differential ratio and tire size. I'm tempted to go try it, but I think I'll wait until morning just to see. Of course, drag coefficients make a big difference in this situation. I beleive the XRT is a 0.4, so you might want to keep that in mind too. Nonetheless, as Bob stated wind resistance plays a large role at higher speeds.

