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Post by xtian on Oct 24, 2009 8:47:28 GMT 1
exactly, but as we all have different driving style and experience, the set used by the fastest man on the track might not help you or fit your style... it's also imprtant I think to ride a lot with the same set rather than jsust switch set every 5 laps and never now how the car is reacting...
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Post by hanziboy on Oct 24, 2009 12:56:12 GMT 1
Indeed, I often can't drive those fastest set's. to twitchy indeed. But why they can drive it and be more then 1 sec faster..... A lot also depends on the controller they use.. I can imagine a set for a g25 does not react the same for a joystick Scatter has to use. Also the motor braking is much more controlled by manual shifting then the automatic shifting Scatter has to use. Also a set made for guys using a gamepad (yes some use this), will not react the same as the wheel. Not speaking of keyboard and mouse drivers.....
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Post by SLO_Scatter on Oct 24, 2009 14:47:45 GMT 1
Agreed. And since I'm mostly lost when it comes to making a setup, I try to adapt my driving style to the setup I'm using. Like Hans said, I don't like to jump from setup to setup, but if it doesn't feel right there's no use wasting time trying to adjust to a setup that pushes too much or snaps around. So I keep trying different setups until I find one that feels comfortable, then I start going work on hitting my marks.
Make any sense?
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Post by xtian on Oct 25, 2009 17:23:56 GMT 1
maybe you could just focus on the limited functions that would make your particular set easier, like gear ratios, brake balance, and clutch settings?
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Post by SLO_Scatter on Oct 25, 2009 19:18:38 GMT 1
maybe you could just focus on the limited functions that would make your particular set easier, like gear ratios, brake balance, and clutch settings? True. Those settings I play with, plus tire pressure.
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