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z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
Quote from shiny_red_cobra :Remember that irl you don't rev to 8000 RPM before shifting gears, and you rarely go over 3000 RPM.

Speak for yourself.
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
There are clearly no Germans present either. I note the lack of towels on any of the seats.
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
Quote from texas12 :haha if u wanna see how car totally messes up then take xfg and go to black wood and ket into 5 gear and then immidiatly change to R and then look speedo meter and power meter XD thats fun and u cant get it run again

Only cars I know with a power meter are the prius and the veyron!
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
Quote from J@tko :Have you not seen the 'post your girlfriend' thread?
Unless.....

Yeah, I'd rather people think I'm making mine up than allow them to masturbate furiously over a picture I've put up of her, likely to the Tron soundtrack if my experience of internet people is anything to go by.....
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z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
Quote from dawesdust_12 :girlfriend

LOL - as if anyone on this forum other than Becky has a girlfriend.
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
I do my most frantic Murray Walker impression whilst simultaneously waving a checkered flag and making my very best "the crowd goes wild" noise and also playing Fleetwood Mac's "The Chain" (the good bit a minute or so in) using an ingenious one man band set-up involving me wearing a bass guitar, a normal guitar, and a bass, high-hat and snare drum, and tabbing between the various views in LFS in order to get that classic "montage" feeling.
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
You would of course have to program not only the behavior of the differential, but the behavior of the computer that takes in all the steering inputs, yaw rates, throttle application, where the engine is in the rpm range etc.

Even the BMW DSC (not ASC, that is comparatively simple) does an amazing amount of computation using all sorts of sensors to keep you on the road when you make an ambitious entry into a corner.

It is doable, but it is also quite boring in comparison... I think for most people, a new car with no traction control is more exciting than an RB4 that adjusts the break and throttle application along with the differential locking for you in order to allow the car to make the turn you're steering for...

similarly, I'd say the 599 is an amazing car, but not as much fun to race as a 430 with the TC off...
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
Quote from Jakg :Yes.

They loved it, but their review (and the whole show) was rubbish.

I still spent £1.50 so I could spend the day in a fantasy where I own a 911.
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
Quote from dougie-lampkin :Or you could do some circuit wizardry and use the car's on-board computer (assuming it has one of course) to do your bidding. Mind you, it will probably crash (literally, into a tree) if you try and install Vista, but XP should be OK. You'll get more MPG with XP anyway Then just install LFS (don't ask where, I haven't a clue), and hook up the computer console (again, I'm assuming it has a centre console) to the computer. Voila, properly built in LFS, and the abilitly to use MSN while you drive. Also there's currently no laws about using a keyboard while driving, so you would still be perfectly legal. Epic win.

I see you also are subjected to ICT GCSE 'education'."
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
Quote from Jakg :suspension hydralic-ised.

Look at Sebastian Loeb go:

z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
Quote from STROBE :I just remembered another photo I took, some time after the karting had finished. It wasn't taken with my usual camera, as my phone was the only thing I had with me. However, please admire... Ben's throne!

I hate one of those made entirely of guinness cans, till one day, I tripped, landed badly on it, and it cut me to shreds. Good work though!

I don't suppose any of your lot will be at Daytona Sandown friday night? They've got shiny new rotax jobbies which promise a bit more buzz in your right boot....

and of course, that spectacular part of the natural landscape which somehow always puts a dribble of water across the braking zone for the first corner, which happens to be maximum speed. 3 laps turning in without lifting off, lap number four, suddenly I'm mowing the lawn just off that red 'n white business with all the opposite lock in the world and a heckuva lean on begging rental tires to buck the "mid-crash" trend and bite.
Last edited by z3r0c00l, .
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
Coding the 599 would be an absolute nightmare, because so many aspects of the handling are directly controlled by the onboard computer. It is a very different car if you turn all of them off.

I approve of the rest of them though, certainly.

Secondly, there is something fun about man-handling a sloppy chassis old american car with rubbish brakes and a live axle, while some, nimble, turbocharged asianmobile dances around you, only to light up a 5.7l v8, and just overtake before the next corner, where you once again, take your life in your hands. imo.
Last edited by z3r0c00l, .
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
Quote from hda :the lesson i've learned from following this thread:

don't read anything in the lfs forum that's not on the test patch section.

would keep me from visiting the forum everyday hoping to get some news :/

Which is set to "not visible" because no public test patches are available currently. This all we got.
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
I'm going to put in a quick post to this too. I really wanted to come this time around, but I ended up doing the Stelvio Pass/Millau Bridge/Nurburgring Europe trip of a lifetime! I was still a little miffed when I came back though, ended up driving up to Sandown for some arrive and drive mayhem.

Consider myself subscribed to this thread with much interest, although obviously, it is a little way off yet.
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
I think its important, as it adds another depth to racing. There are a few australian endurance races where you have to change the brake pads atleast once during the race too, which is always interesting to watch!

I think it is especially key to the road cars, accomodating brake fade is part of many a race where uprated pads and fluid/hoses are all that are allowed. I can't imagine the XF GTI has a set of 12pot AP Racing jobbies on what is essentially a £2k car.

It is also important for the single seaters, as they have brakes designed to opporate at very high temperatures. From my very limited Formula Renault experience, when you go out, the cold brakes are absolutely terrifying to start with, and it is only after a few hard corners you can start to get that "landed on an aircraft carrier arrest wire" braking going on.

Lastly, the code is pretty much all there from the tyre heat model. I know there are some changes such as how much air flows over the brakes for a given speed, and how much heat is transfered accordingly, and how long the pad heat takes to soak into the calipers and at what point does the pad surface start converting to a gas which lubricates the pad on the disc, and when the fluid starts boiling, yadda yadda yadda...

but to start with, all you need is brake cooling as a function of forward motion, and heat being added during braking as a function of brakepressure, and braking effectiveness decreasing exponentially with heat after 270 degrees or similar, tune using test patches to check appropriate drivability.
Last edited by z3r0c00l, .
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
Quote :"The tyres squeal from the get-go, chassis behaviour is exaggerated and the ABS triggers almost instantly. Oh, and I can’t disable the stability control. I assumed this was another foible of these early models, but no. As VW’s product communications manager Christian Bühlmann points out: ‘All VW products have traction and stability systems that remain partially active even if switched off.’

I can’t help thinking that in a coupe as driver-orientated as this one (and make no mistake, it is) it would be nice to have full control. It’s certainly not helping my cause, with requests for dramatic action shots ringing in my ears since I left the office yesterday. Still, there’s only so much ESP can do to combat a thuggish attitude and a good tweak on the handbrake…"

- http://www.evo.co.uk/carreview ... /volkswagen_scirocco.html

Please, Scawen, tell us it ain't so!

Although this is a bit more like it:

Quote :Its behaviour and manners are very hot- hatch – it cocks a rear wheel in the air and exhibits (and successfully communicates) a real enthusiasm for the task in hand. It’s also surprisingly adjustable on the throttle. Not to the extent of provoking the rear wheels into moving out of line – it’s too planted and safe for that – but enough to allow plenty of scope for line-tightening. Given the rear axle’s origins, we hadn’t expected it to be this playful.

Quote :

Last edited by z3r0c00l, .
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
Quote from geeman1 :Of course the Scirocco in LFS has a turbo!
If it doesn't have a gauge it doesn't mean it doesn't have a turbo...

I was asking before I found out for certain that it was the 200hp version they had built in LFS, I was wondering how they had modeled the twin charged 160hp 1.4 engine as I have suffered poorly engineered and tuned I4 engines during my early years of driving and prefer either FI or I6/V8 now. The idea of driving a twin charged engine is interesting to me as I have not had the opportunity to experience it in real life.

If anyone has been there and had a go, I would assume you can hear some turbo whine, so irrespective of the lack of a boost gauge, you should have a rough idea of spool times.

If VW were pleased with the thing as a whole, I can't imagine a week long spool time would be tollerated as it detracts from the driving experience. Consequently, I would very much like to know if any changes have been made to the current exhaust driven turbocharger simulation/representation/model/how-the-damn-thing-drives.
Last edited by z3r0c00l, .
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
A boost gauge is not a functional part of a exhaust driven forced induction system, I was just curious.

As the quick model is a turbo charged power-plant, as to whether it had the same slightly out-dated modeling that gives the current turbo cars such a lengthy spool time.

edit:

Ok so studying it a bit further, the 1.4 160hp is twin charged, the 2.0 200hp version is just turbocharged. My question still stands, has the boost model changed?
Last edited by z3r0c00l, .
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
Does it use the existing boost model?
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
I think bridgestones squirm a lot and give poor feel, and un-even wear.
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed







z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
Quote from morcs :The red bits on my old wingman wheel did melt a bit. The same happened with the blue leather bits in my Fiesta Zetec S though as well, possibly due to death grippage.

That's a confirmed ford defect, go and have a word with your local dealer, they may well issue you a newer, less easy to ruin replacement.
z3r0c00l
S2 licensed
I compared to a multitude of cars in the same price range, and the Trabant is a 1957 design so that is hardly a fair comparison. The 2cv was designed for farm work, so again, hardly a fair comparison.

The saxo/106 rear suspension design sucks, it doesn't even come with anti-roll bars standard. It's a miserably unsafe car, even NCAP reckon 2 stars is about all its worth. Not as bad as the new 107s mind, where your rear passengers head rests on the rear windscreen, not exactly ideal.

If you're talking about modified cars, obviously it isn't just a saxo anymore, but if you're going to swap out the springs, dampers, top mounts, strut bars, roll bars and links etc, by the end of replacing the "weak links" there isn't anything saxo left that isn't cosmetic.

If you do this with every car you improve them all by the same standard, of course a modified stripped and bilstiened VTS will beat a stock 323i, but rip out a the 323i and drop its suspension, change the rear diff and it will go back to running rings round it. All improvements are relative.

One of my work collegues has a saxo vtr he paid £3k for, I spent an extra £1k, and I have 2.5l E46, leather, air conditioning, comfortable seats, a nice gear knob etc. (and my fuel economy is better, 37mpg vs. 32mpg)

I maintain they are a poor value for money choice as a daily driver, and not as biblically fast as everyone says.


I'll be at sandown kart track (www.daytona.co.uk) at 13:00 today if you'd like to come and have a chat about it, fastest lap time wins the pointless arguement?


Quote from Soeren Scharf :...compared to what? .... a 2CV?
Ever driven a Trabant?

Chassis: If you mean springs, dampers, anti roll bar .... Do you really think that we drive slalom without modification of these parts?

...?

FGED GREDG RDFGDR GSFDG