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| Down Shifting |
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jhuuskon
Member #302
April 2000
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Quote: It's all about American muscle and Japanese tuners. I don't have time to get to that now but when i come back from school i will. You don't deserve my sig. |
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miran
Member #2,407
June 2002
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Quote: I don't have time to get to that now but when i come back from school i will. And this post is here just to make sure of that. In case no one else posts... -- |
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Rampage
Member #3,035
December 2002
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I have a Renault Clio and it has served me well in its two years of life. Of course, Renault and Nissan are now a single company, but so far I have no complaints. On topic: I never knew how to do the engine braking. I just recently started to practice, and when it comes out right, it doesn't sound like the engine is overstressed. At least, I don't think it's something it can't handle. -R |
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Tobias Dammers
Member #2,604
August 2002
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Quote: As I think somebody said, engine and transmission repairs are more expensive than brakes. The last car I owned needed its brakes repaired, which would have cost me more than the car was worth. So naturally, I sold the stupid thing. Quote: was estimated to cost only $125,000 USD Let's assume the thing lasts 10 years. That's 12500 $ per year, about five to six times my personal total mobility budget (including rental cars, train tickets, bicycle repairs and walking shoes). But yeah, definitely a useful thing to have, that car. --- |
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bamccaig
Member #7,536
July 2006
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Tobias Dammers said: The last car I owned needed its brakes repaired, which would have cost me more than the car was worth. So naturally, I sold the stupid thing. I'm curious how much this was. The brakes shouldn't be overly expensive to replace (nor is it pennies). Was it for a garage to do it or just the replacement parts? Keep in mind that simple transmission work can often reach into the 4-digits and engine trouble is often very expensive as well. Tobias Dammers (about the Chrysler ME 4-12) said: Let's assume the thing lasts 10 years. That's 12500 $ per year, about five to six times my personal total mobility budget (including rental cars, train tickets, bicycle repairs and walking shoes). But yeah, definitely a useful thing to have, that car. Ummm, I wasn't comparing it to your Civic, Celica, or even your SL500. I compared it to Ferrari. I'd love to compare Ferrari prices with the ME 4-12, but products in the millions generally have individual pricing. In the 5 minutes Googling from work I found no mention of prices for new Ferraris on any site. I did however find that used Ferarri's with V8s expect about a third more than the ME 4-12 was supposed to cost new... Again, American vs. European.
The people who can afford them buy them: they are worth a lot for a reason. They aren't useless; they just aren't necessary. These are cars that can, in the right hands, turn corners at speeds many of our cars would struggle to reach. I know from experience that my '89 Camry tops out around 107 MPH (175 KM/H or so). You wouldn't buy an ME 4-12 to get you to work everyday or for grocery runs. You'd get one if you were able to make 6 figures in a year and were serious about performance cars.
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jhuuskon
Member #302
April 2000
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That's the point. I had prepred a long post but school's IE ate it. American engineers don't know how to create a vehicle that is both practical and fun to drive at the same time. They go overboard with one (Minivans) or the other (Viper and the like) or none (Dodge Caliber, a SUV that's too small for the U, too slow the S and looks horrible to boot). The japanese car makers are great at creating vehicles that are involving and fun to drive hard but are uncomfortable when you just need to commute. Or, like in case of the ever favourite vehicle of extremely average people, the Toyota Corolla, the dullest cars of all time. Thank god European car makers know what the reasonable yet fun-loving driver needs. His prayers have been answered numerous times: First in 1976 by Volkswagen with the Golf GTI (it took them 30 years to come up with another Golf GTI that wasn't slower than the predecessor), then in 1983 by Peugeot with the 205 GTi, in 1990 by Renault with the Clio 1.8 16v and in 2001 by Ford Europe with the Focus RS and lately, by Volkswagen again with the Polo GTI. What do these cars have in common? They're called Hot Hatchbacks. At their respective time frames, they were fast, cheap to buy, economical, massively fun to drive and could be used to move a filing cabinet. These days they're still cheap to buy, economical and fun to drive. They're just not up to spec with modern day safety regulations. All my driving experiences with american-made cars have been either A: masked in a fluffy layer of power-assisted everything making them unnervingly numb in terms of driving feel or B: uncomfortable yet dull. Yes. Even the Firebird Trans Am with factory chassis kit was dull. I'd rather take a 205 GTi any day. Sure it had the muscle but the weight (a 2300kg "sports car"? more like a road ferry) is such a strain that the controls had to be power-assisted too far. Plus, you can't see out from that thing. I don't want a car that accelerates with 400 horsepower, then having to slow down toa crawl to navigate a bend that a Focus can manage without slowing down. And what if I need to move that filing cabinet? You don't deserve my sig. |
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piccolo
Member #3,163
January 2003
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I can fit a filing cabinet in my Toyota Celica with the back seats down. I just help me coz move into his new apartment the other day. edit: my back seats are very roomy for a two door car. theres is enough room for wow |
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Sevalecan
Member #4,686
June 2004
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Quote: turns turns corners handling
No, I still prefer raw power. Plus, 60's American muscle just looks badass. SUVs? We have an 85 diesel suburban.. Sport? Ok, maybe not. But the engine sure sounds mean. I love the diesel. Does it have lots of room in the back? Yes, it has room for several file cabinets! All at the same time! TeamTerradactyl: SevalecanDragon: I should shoot you for even CONSIDERING coding like that, but I was ROFLing too hard to stand up. I love it! |
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Arthur Kalliokoski
Second in Command
February 2005
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Get an old cop car from the county auction, rebuild as necessary. Blues Brothers all the way! They all watch too much MSNBC... they get ideas. |
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HoHo
Member #4,534
April 2004
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Quote: No, I still prefer raw power. Raw powet is good only for as long as you don't have to turn. I personally like to turn my car also, preferrably not stopping while doing it __________ |
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bamccaig
Member #7,536
July 2006
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jhuuskon said: it took them 30 years to come up with another Golf GTI that wasn't slower than the predecessor It impresses you that they were unable to match their car's speed performance in 30 years? That's nothing to be proud of. I guarantee the '76 Golf GTI was NEVER the fastest car in the world. More than likely they weren't trying to improve its performance, especially since the 70s brought raised insurance rates and higher gas prices. Also, Volkswagen isn't known as a high performance brand. The fact is that fuel economy is not a naturally desireable quality; rather, it is circumstancially desirable. If gasoline was in infinite supply and inexpensive to process there would probably be no such thing as fuel economic cars. Also note that insurance rates influence car production, as demonstrated in the 70s, so if there still were fuel economic cars, insurance rates would be why. I hope that we can find a renewable resource with harnessable power like that of gasoline, or better. Muscle cars aren't going away until their fuel sources do. Hopefully the opposite happens and fuel economic cars go away.
jhuuskon said: Sure it had the muscle but the weight (a 2300kg "sports car"? more like a road ferry) is such a strain that the controls had to be power-assisted too far. Weight is a side effect of features. Every feature weighs something and they all add up. European cars tend to lack many features which results in a much lighter, less functional car. We used to own a Volkswagen Rabit (an '86, I think) and the doors were paper thin... If a larger vehicle hits you it doesn't take a rocket scientist to predict the outcome. You might also be surprised by the weight of some European/Japanese cars. Also, in the right hands, weight can be used to help you through a corner (by shifting it outside and having it recover towards the inside) or help to do advanced manuevers that required weight transfer. Friction is often the enemy and weight can in some cases be used to muscle against it (obviously having the opposite effect in other situations - hense, power/torque). Besides, 2300 Kg isn't unbareable. I prefer a mid-sized car with power to a car that weighs nothing. jhuuskon said: Plus, you can't see out from that thing. Visibility is sometimes sacrificed for other characteristics. For example, aerodynamics and styling. The truth is that properly configured mirrors should show you most of what is behind the perpendicular line crossing through your body, meaning you should only ever have to look 90 degrees in either direction. Anything which isn't directly visible would have crossed through your line of sight to get there so you should have already seen it. In terms of backing up, some cars are better than others, but you should still be able to see if the car is adjusted right. You should know what is behind you for stationary objects before trying to back up anyway. Non-stationary objects will generally notice you are backing up and hopefully try to yield to you. jhuuskon said: I don't want a car that accelerates with 400 horsepower, then having to slow down toa crawl to navigate a bend that a Focus can manage without slowing down. You don't accelerate with horsepower rather you accelerate with torque, although they are directly related. Horsepower is better described in terms of top speed or towing capacity or it's ability to power up a hill. For example, do you have to down-shift going up hill or can you up-shift and keep accelerating? I rank Ford at the bottom of my list, along side Hyundai and Kia; the top being the best auto makers. And if a company isn't well known in North America then it's not even on my list. Just because a car has 400 horsepower (or pound-feet [lb. ft.] of torque, for that matter) doesn't mean your Focus can out corner it. Perhaps the muscle car will have to slow down to make the corner, but at least it can go fast in the first place. That's not to say that it can't handle the corner at a similar (possibly higher) speed as your Focus. The power/torque output of an engine has relatively little to do with it's cornering ability. Also, in the right hands, power and torque can be harnessed in a corner such as in drifting. Speaking of cornering, when automotive reviewers got their hands on the 2002 Dodge Ram, they were amazed at it's cornering capacity. They described its handling like that of a sports car. This was derived by road, track, and G-force tests. For those of you that don't know, the Dodge Ram is a full-sized pickup truck. jhuuskon said: And what if I need to move that filing cabinet? giggles Filing cabinet!? CALL THE FIRE DEPARTMENT! Or you park the Charger or Challenger and load the filing cabinet onto your Ram. Not because you couldn't fit the filing cabinet into the cars, but why bother when you don't have to? Not to mention, the majority of American made cars are not 400 horse muscle cars with imaginary trunk space. Most of them are economical, practical, 4-doors for the family. It's just that some of them, like the Charger, are available with as much as 425 horsepower or more as well. jhuuskon said: They're just not up to spec with modern day safety regulations. And most American cars don't neglect safety features. Many of them have extremely high safety standards. And others are Fords... I pretty much ignore that alliance of companies.
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jhuuskon
Member #302
April 2000
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Quote: It impresses you that they were unable to match their car's speed performance in 30 years? It doesn't impress me. I just wanted to point out that Golfs GTI's from mark 2 to 4 got progressively heavier and duller and slower. Quote: European cars tend to lack many features which results in a much lighter, less functional car. You're trying to troll now or just being incredibly ignorant. I would still like to point out that GM was manufacturing pushrod I4 engines well in the 90's. Quote: I guarantee the '76 Golf GTI was NEVER the fastest car in the world. Who cares? For that money then, it was definitely the most fun vehicle you could get. Quote: We used to own a Volkswagen Rabit (an '86, I think) The mark 2 golf is probably the dullest example of european motoring i've ever driven so your example is not very good one. Quote: The fact is that fuel economy is not a naturally desireable quality; rather, it is circumstancially desirable. So you wouldn't mind refuelling a 100 litre fuel tank 3 times to commute 3 km? I would, even if fuel was cheap. Quote: Also, in the right hands, weight can be used to help you through a corner And they build rally cars halfway out of carbon fibre just for fun? Quote: Also, in the right hands, power and torque can be harnessed in a corner such as in drifting. The difference is that drifiting not only consumes massively fuel, tires and the road, it also looks incredibly stupid. Quote: automotive reviewers ... are paid by the advertisers. Obviously it's worthwhile to laud the features of a vehicle whose advertising pays your bills. I wouldn't trust a magazine reviewer to do a test drive for me. It's a well known fact that americans and europeans like their cars different. That's why american-style models don't simply sell in europe, and vice versa. Since you've been showing off with the greatest what detroit has to offer, i can show you what i would buy if i had the €€€: You don't deserve my sig. |
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Johan Halmén
Member #1,550
September 2001
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{"name":"591606","src":"\/\/djungxnpq2nug.cloudfront.net\/image\/cache\/9\/2\/9239d9dd05c36a710df8db1014f42c6d.jpg","w":716,"h":418,"tn":"\/\/djungxnpq2nug.cloudfront.net\/image\/cache\/9\/2\/9239d9dd05c36a710df8db1014f42c6d"} ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Years of thorough research have revealed that what people find beautiful about the Mandelbrot set is not the set itself, but all the rest. |
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HoHo
Member #4,534
April 2004
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Quote: The difference is that drifiting not only consumes massively fuel, tires and the road, it also looks incredibly stupid. ... and is slower than proper turning __________ |
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jhuuskon
Member #302
April 2000
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I said: Peugeot 407 Coupe 2.7 V6 HDi biturbo Pack. Strike that. You don't deserve my sig. |
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HoHo
Member #4,534
April 2004
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One monster European car would be Bugatti Veyron 16.4. Though it costs way more than your average car and at top speed takes 115L per 100km (2.1mpg). 8 liter 16 cylinder engine with quad turbos and ten radiators cooling it all will surely make you a winner in most "who has bigger" contests A nice video of how Top Gear achieved 407km/h with that car: http://libertypost.org/cgi-bin/readart.cgi?ArtNum=179330 Quote: The Veyron is the quickest production car to reach 100 km/h (62 mph) with an estimated time of 2.5 seconds. It reaches 60mph in approximately 2.46 seconds. It also reaches 200 and 300 km/h (124 and 186 mph) in 7.3 and 16.7 seconds respectively. This makes the Veyron the quickest accelerating production car in history. It also consumes more fuel than any other production car, using 40.4 L/100 km (5.82 mpg) in city driving and 24.1 L/100 km (10 mpg) in combined cycle. At full throttle, it uses more than 125 L/100 km (2.1 mpg), which would empty its 100 L fuel tank in just 12.5 minutes
If I would ever want to get a big car for myself I'd probably just get some €20k thingie and add another €20k for upgrades. I'm not that interested in dragracing but I do like driving on ice and curved roads. That 1k hp Veyron wouldn't probably suite that well for those conditions, not to mention it would cost >30x more __________ |
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BAF
Member #2,981
December 2002
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Yeah, but 12.5 minutes for fuel isn't too bad, because the tires only last something like 16 minutes at that speed. |
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Matt Smith
Member #783
November 2000
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Quote: European cars tend to lack many features which results in a much lighter, less functional car. Ah, that's why I can't find the cup holder in my Fiesta. Quote:
it all will surely make you a winner in most "who has bigger" contests "I've got the biggest ding in my wing!" {"name":"_42647261_bugattifront2_416.jpg","src":"\/\/djungxnpq2nug.cloudfront.net\/image\/cache\/2\/a\/2a828d55fe68731eb9d81e530671df2f.jpg","w":416,"h":300,"tn":"\/\/djungxnpq2nug.cloudfront.net\/image\/cache\/2\/a\/2a828d55fe68731eb9d81e530671df2f"} |
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bamccaig
Member #7,536
July 2006
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jhuuskon said: You're trying to troll now or just being incredibly ignorant. I would still like to point out that GM was manufacturing pushrod I4 engines well in the 90's. Although I am a fan of some GM products (i.e. GTOs, Trans Ams, Camaros, Corvettes,........... Probably a few others, but meh... If you haven't picked up the subtleties jhuuskon said: So you wouldn't mind refuelling a 100 litre fuel tank 3 times to commute 3 km? I would, even if fuel was cheap. Everything is proportional. What if fuel was free and service was instantaneous? Obviously as you move from one extreme to the other the result will change accordingly. If you didn't like my last example, what if money was no object and fuel was renewable? Obviously the limiting factor in today's market is money and the dwindling fuel reserves. Eliminate those limitations and you have to admit that a powerful, fast car is desirable. If you don't agree you may be a chick. jhuuskon said: And they build rally cars halfway out of carbon fibre just for fun? The more you weigh the more power/torque is required to go fast (which is desirable in a fastest-time event) and you can only squeeze so much power/torque out of the engine compartment found in most rally cars. Also, rally teams live in the real world where fuel is expensive and racing is even more expensive and being able to compete means making due with what you can afford. Also, rally cars are not designed for slick maneuvers. They are designed for going from point A to B as quickly as possible on a variety of courses ranging in climate and terrain. jhuuskon said: Unfortunately, since the americans hate the french for no apparent reason, you can't get this diesel baby even if you wanted. Contrary to ignorant belief, there are more than Americans in North America (though it depends on your definition of American). Canada is largely French and even has a generally French province (Quebec). Ontario also has a number of French dominant communities. Personally, I'm not a fan of French, but I don't hate the people; only the language. Why are you so excited about diesel? "By design, gas engines rev faster and are able to reach higher rpm peaks than diesels. This allows them to attain greater horsepower numbers and quicker 0-60-mph times." Source There's a reason the majority (a vast majority) of racing cars run on gasoline (a more expensive fuel) instead of diesel. jhuuskon said: The difference is that drifiting not only consumes massively fuel, tires and the road, it also looks incredibly stupid. The world agrees that drifting looks beautiful and attractive and that's why it's becoming more popular world-wide. I've heard it's extremely popular in Japan, where it originated as a sport, but it's spreading all over the world on road and track. It's obviously a lot funner to drift around a corner than to slow down. It also has a number of benefits, inherent from speed and style. I also wouldn't say it's fair to say the fuel consumption is 'massive' compared to not drifting and the road (depending on it's composition and construction) shouldn't disintegrate. Why do you insist on arguing with me? jhuuskon said: ... are paid by the advertisers. Obviously it's worthwhile to laud the features of a vehicle whose advertising pays your bills. I wouldn't trust a magazine reviewer to do a test drive for me. A simple contradiction to that argument is that the reviewers often pick a variety of competitors' cars in different classes. If they were merely being bought you would expect them to favor a company or alliance of companies. HoHo said: .. and is slower than proper turning
Which is obviously why rally racers brake coming into a corner and accelerate at the apex like road racers do. However, drifting does wear down tires and burn fuel faster than if you were cornering like a road racer does. Road races are often an endurance sport and that's why they don't drift: pit stops are very expensive (time [money] and money). -- acc.js | al4anim - Allegro 4 Animation library | Allegro 5 VS/NuGet Guide | Allegro.cc Mockup | Allegro.cc <code> Tag | Allegro 4 Timer Example (w/ Semaphores) | Allegro 5 "Winpkg" (MSVC readme) | Bambot | Blog | C++ STL Container Flowchart | Castopulence Software | Check Return Values | Derail? | Is This A Discussion? Flow Chart | Filesystem Hierarchy Standard | Clean Code Talks - Global State and Singletons | How To Use Header Files | GNU/Linux (Debian, Fedora, Gentoo) | rot (rot13, rot47, rotN) | Streaming |
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Johan Halmén
Member #1,550
September 2001
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Quote: There's a reason the majority (a vast majority) of racing cars run on gasoline (a more expensive fuel) instead of diesel. At least F1 cars use some extremely purified (and expensive) gasoline. My car would probably run with that gas quite well, but there would be no difference. F1 cars are so extremely tuned, that they need the pure gas. I believe Diesel is more of a junk fuel by definition. If one would tune a diesel engine in a similar manner, so that one would have to purifiy the fuel, one would simply have to take away essential components from the fuel and it wouldn't like be the same fuel. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Years of thorough research have revealed that what people find beautiful about the Mandelbrot set is not the set itself, but all the rest. |
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Inphernic
Member #1,111
March 2001
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Quote: The world agrees that drifting looks beautiful and attractive and that's why it's becoming more popular world-wide. I've heard it's extremely popular in Japan, where it originated as a sport, but it's spreading all over the world on road and track. It's obviously a lot funner to drift around a corner than to slow down. It also has a number of benefits, inherent from speed and style.
What world? Drifting may look 'cool' for the first two times and then it becomes a silly pastime for juveniles with a deathwish or complete disregard for their own/others' road safety. -- |
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BAF
Member #2,981
December 2002
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Is anyone else seeing bamccaig as more and more immature every post he makes? |
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bamccaig
Member #7,536
July 2006
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Inphernic said: What world? Drifting may look 'cool' for the first two times and then it becomes a silly pastime for juveniles with a deathwish or complete disregard for their own/others' road safety.
The free world outside of Europe, I guess. Drifting isn't silly. Thinking something so dynamic and expressive only peaks interest twice is silly. It's also silly to call drifters juveniles with a deathwish because ages range from 15 - 50, most of them appear to be more mature than most posters on this thread (a feat in itself, I'm sure), and they aren't killing themselves. They're expressing themselves with a beautiful and incredibly fun use of automobiles; enjoying life. If they had no regard for their own safety or others' safety they wouldn't last long: they'd either be in jail or dead. -- acc.js | al4anim - Allegro 4 Animation library | Allegro 5 VS/NuGet Guide | Allegro.cc Mockup | Allegro.cc <code> Tag | Allegro 4 Timer Example (w/ Semaphores) | Allegro 5 "Winpkg" (MSVC readme) | Bambot | Blog | C++ STL Container Flowchart | Castopulence Software | Check Return Values | Derail? | Is This A Discussion? Flow Chart | Filesystem Hierarchy Standard | Clean Code Talks - Global State and Singletons | How To Use Header Files | GNU/Linux (Debian, Fedora, Gentoo) | rot (rot13, rot47, rotN) | Streaming |
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BAF
Member #2,981
December 2002
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Well, I'm pretty sure it is illegal. But the whole idea to doing illegal things is not to get sent to jail. |
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bamccaig
Member #7,536
July 2006
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BAF said: Well, I'm pretty sure it is illegal. But the whole idea to doing illegal things is not to get sent to jail. Which is why you generally don't do such loud, exciting things in the public eye. You do it on empty streets, in empty parking lots, or on race tracks. And those that are really careful have spotters watching for other drivers/pedestrians. I'm not sure on the exact law that says you can't drift, but I'm sure it's more inherited from other laws. I'd have to check on that though. -- acc.js | al4anim - Allegro 4 Animation library | Allegro 5 VS/NuGet Guide | Allegro.cc Mockup | Allegro.cc <code> Tag | Allegro 4 Timer Example (w/ Semaphores) | Allegro 5 "Winpkg" (MSVC readme) | Bambot | Blog | C++ STL Container Flowchart | Castopulence Software | Check Return Values | Derail? | Is This A Discussion? Flow Chart | Filesystem Hierarchy Standard | Clean Code Talks - Global State and Singletons | How To Use Header Files | GNU/Linux (Debian, Fedora, Gentoo) | rot (rot13, rot47, rotN) | Streaming |
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