Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

This question's bugged me for a while... when is it a drift and when is it a powerslide? What's the difference between the two, and how do you stop one from becoming the other?

A lot of people say they're drifting when all they're doing is momentarly losing traction in the rear wheels (and when their rear regain traction this is when they've come out of drift, even though they've done nothing to make it happen)... is this drift or just a slide?

Or is drift just a RWD powerslide?

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/22097-drift-or-powerslide/
Share on other sites

  • Replies 49
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Drift is about style and content, not speed.

Drift is the art of keep the tail out as far as you can for as long as you can without spinning.

Power , h/brake , clutch kicking , scandinavian flicking , powering are all techniques used to obtain the objective.

Cheers

Ken

Guest RedLineGTR
Originally posted by NisMojo

Drift is best learnt in the Wet...

IN the dry, you have a greater chance of over correcting and crashing hard....

i would rekon is you loose it in the wey its abit hard to stop than it is in the dry. But a track day would be the best (safest place to practise).

Originally posted by PHaT MR30

Jap drifting is about being 90 degrees to the corner. before, during and after the corner.

doing a skid round a corner and kicking the back end out is not drift

Hit the nail on the head there...

Lately I`ve seen a number of Australian "Drift" vids off the net, just short pieces, and for the most part... there just kicking the tail out on exit! Aaah, Drift? Haven`t got the gonads more like it.

So many of those vids are titled "Check out this awesome drift!", or "Wanna see a Zed drift?" and I`m like, ok I`d love to see what Aussies can do nowadays. Then upon opening the file, I see this big power Skyline or whatever, and the driver *flys* up to the corner, slams on the brakes, putters around the corner, then floors the throttle on exit, resulting in what looks like a little chirp to the side. Mmmmm.

Please tell me this is just an inexperienced "Drifter" getting all excited about losing traction for the first time!

Please DON`T tell me that Danny from "Japanese Motorsport" is the only guy in Australia that can drift!!!!

I disagree.

You dont want to be 90 degrees to the corner after the corner.

You want to be parallel with the exit line if its a single corner drift.

If you are at 90deg to the corner AFTER the corner, you are totally sideways when you want to be straight.

"Originally posted by PHaT MR30

Jap drifting is about being 90 degrees to the corner. before, during and after the corner.

doing a skid round a corner and kicking the back end out is not drift

Hit the nail on the head there... "

Originally posted by slip

I disagree.

You dont want to be 90 degrees to the corner after the corner.

You want to be parallel with the exit line if its a single corner drift.

If you are at 90deg to the corner AFTER the corner, you are totally sideways when you want to be straight.

Of course man it's pretty hard to keep going if your at 90 degrees to the corner at exit. But you should be at least 30 degrees, right? Being parallel with the exit line is like rallying.

But I guess the whole idea with professional drift is to get the car as sideways as possible, as long as possible for any given corner. No if's, no buts. If theres room to continue the drift on exit, well then keep going!

Originally posted by Rezz

Being parallel with the exit line is like rallying.

Hence my initial question... when does it stop being a drift and become a powerslide.

I remember watching an old Colin Chapman vid, and I think Jackie Stewart was driving an Escort in the '68(?) British Touring Car Chapionship. He was the ultimate powersliding master. He had that Escort, as underpowered as it was, sliding like you wouldn't believe around Brands Hatch, easily getting the fastest lap times... it was beutiful to watch, seeing this old Escort almost "floating" around the faster corners...

In that situation, powersliding to get a faster laptime, is kinda outdated now in all but rallying, due to advances in tyre technology, suspension design etc... Whats more, the car is never out of control to an extent that it's hindering laptimes... well thats the theory anyway.

Drifting on the other hand (in the circuit battle sense of it) is an intentional powerslide sustained for as long as possible with no consideration of lap times.

Feel free to flame what I just wrote, thats just my understanding after going to illegal and circuit drift events here in Japan.

The most "functional" drift is having the car sideways before the turn, but the angle of the car should be parrallel with the straight bit of road you end up on.. but with the car still sliding sideways, a little more angle and a nice correction also makes for nice drift...

A snake tail is a drift gone wrong.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • So yes. All of them. Something like 98% of all fuel in the USA has 10% ethanol: https://afdc.energy.gov/fuels/ethanol-fuel-basics It's labelled as like, AKI, 87, 91, 93 with an E10 or E5 or E15 label on the pump. At a certain point, it's not just "E10" instead of 91. It is 91, 95, 98, and all of them have 10% Ethanol in them. You can also get E85 and E30 which is why you do see some people rolling around with E30 tunes in them.
    • Thanks for the response. This is an 04 EP3 Type R. JDM spec. Fairly certain they're just basic BC racing coils. I do plan to keep as the ride quality on stock I've been told is pretty meh given Sydney roads. If I were to go down that avenue, does NSW require them to be a certain spec (close to original) etc?
    • Should have asked what is the car?
    • I've had two super conflicting experiences with blue slips. My 30 year old E39 waltzed through with no issues but my brother in law was knocked back on 12 y/o 3 series due to wiper blades and some cracking in a control arm bush.  What kind of coil overs? Do you want to keep them after?  If it was me I'd get some dirt cheap shocks and springs from eBay or scumtree. Not ideal but will get you over the line and might even be less than $1k.
    • Hey guys,  Way back when (about 15yrs plus), I picked up a beautiful set of Tein 'Super Racing Spec Circuit Master RE' coilovers from Russman. I have legit never fitted them to my car, as it was garaged indefinitely while i bought a house Yada Yada. They look brand new! Anyway its time to pick up where I left off, and have started doing some khanacross and am booked in for a hill climb next month. The car has some hard af Nismo shocks in ATM, which has me wanting to upgrade again, and now I am left wondering if it's worth having these teins rebuilt? I think they where an ok shock back then, but how do they compare to what's on the market now?  Shockworks/mca are 2800+, and I am sure they are great. But if I can have these rebuilt and be better than, say, a set of bc's for around the cost of bc's, I would be happy with the performance v cost trade off.  If they are considered outdated and rubbish these days, so be it, I'll put them on the shelf and be happy to look at the pretty green colour while I save for the SW/MCA option. Grateful for your thoughts on the matter, and suggestions on who could do the rebuild if it's a worthwhile pursuit.  cheers, Rowdy. 
×
×
  • Create New...