If you give them some throttle they're sideways in no time even in the dry. Even non-shifters (~30 bhp) can do this pretty easily.graham.reeds wrote:Go karts are driftable in the wet. In the dry you regain grip really quickly and a whole chunk of speed.
Dunno what tyres you use but the karts I race with two GX200 engines (35bhp) can step out in the dry (and people can spin out at ridiculously low speed) but drifting them is impossible. I have a race Sunday so I will try it post qualifying.Juzh wrote:If you give them some throttle they're sideways in no time even in the dry. Even non-shifters (~30 bhp) can do this pretty easily.graham.reeds wrote:Go karts are driftable in the wet. In the dry you regain grip really quickly and a whole chunk of speed.
But longer wheelbase by about 350 mm.FW17 wrote:Current cars have the same footprint as this
http://www.blogcdn.com/www.autoblog.com ... ass-fd.jpg
I disagree massively.Juzh wrote:Just look at it this way: what's the easiest 4 wheeled thing to drift?
Go-karts.
By FAR.
You can literally mind control those things during a slide. And they're pretty short in length, are they not?
Never driven a 7 series but from my experiences racing shifter karts few times a year as an amateur I can say they were VERY easy to drift all day long. You can really pin point those slides into corners as if it were nothing. Kart tracks are usually narrow and twisty and thus it might seem they're hard to control on the edge, but imo that is not the case.SectorOne wrote:I disagree massively.Juzh wrote:Just look at it this way: what's the easiest 4 wheeled thing to drift?
Go-karts.
By FAR.
You can literally mind control those things during a slide. And they're pretty short in length, are they not?
Compared to say an older BMW 7-series which you can drift around in your sleep a kart is far from docile when over the limit.
I agree, I used to race basic club carts occasionally with no gearbox and those things were fantastically easy to control in a slide. On my favorite circuit they was a right hand hair pin at the end of a straight that was followed by crazy left turn that had about 3 apex's and the fast way thru most of that section was slightly sideways using your accelerator to steer.Juzh wrote: Never driven a 7 series but from my experiences racing shifter karts few times a year as an amateur I can say they were VERY easy to drift all day long. You can really pin point those slides into corners as if it were nothing. Kart tracks are usually narrow and twisty and thus it might seem they're hard to control on the edge, but imo that is not the case.
I guess you're right, but my point is still that a shorter car is harder to drive, which would be good for both the spectacle and the aesthetics of the carsmrluke wrote:I know we are all pro kart drivers and drifting them is dead easy but the point is a 7 series BM with similar power to weight and a fixed diff is much easier to hold at a much higher angle for a longer time.
Look at the size of the cars used in drifting
http://speedhunters-wp-production.s3.am ... 00x800.jpg
Theres the odd car with a much shorter wheelbase but long wheel bases are pretty common.
Anyway this is getting a bit off topic
It´s really two things regarding this subject:mrluke wrote:I know we are all pro kart drivers and drifting them is dead easy but the point is a 7 series BM with similar power to weight and a fixed diff is much easier to hold at a much higher angle for a longer time.