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though. It builds up. The more the slower. You can't beat it really. Doesn't
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have much of an effect anyway. My way of beating it is first, you need to know
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when it releases. Then, before you shift into that gear, shift early and shift
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back then shift again. There, you released the pressure and kept your standard
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acceleration. Really useless though.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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-b)Turning:
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There's quite a bit of methods but the main principle is:
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Accleration-sends you out.
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Braking-sends you out.
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Not doing anything except turning-brings you in.
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The explanation is that if you accelerate, you giving power to resist the turn.
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If you brake, you're not letting the wheels rotate easy and then making the
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weight transfer to the front.
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Method 1-Out in out.
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Oldest trick in the book. You start the turn on the outside, then cut to the
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inside, and finish by exiting through the outside. Very fast and requires little
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braking compared to starting on the inside.
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Method 2-"Left foot" braking.
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This methed is an 8 year old child move. Fast too. In a turn while you're
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starting to veer out, tap the brake. This will transfer some weight to the front
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so the front wheels grip better. Useful for jumps before turns. Why called left
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foot braking? Because in real life, to do this method you use your left foot
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for the brakes.
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Method 3-Braking in general.
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This is how it works. Lower gear means faster braking since you are carrying
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less speed. High gear adds more braking distance. People think it's about
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braking power, but if you learn to distribute it perfectly you'll go faster.
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Method 4-In out in out(feint).
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This move sounds like a setup for out in out, but they are two different
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things.This seems to stress on exit speed.
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Here are some examples:
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Out in out(stars are car's path):
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*******************************
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________________________________*
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\*
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|*
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________________________________/*
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*
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<<*****************************
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In out in out:
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*****
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************************** *
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________________________________*
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\*
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|*
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________________________________/*
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*
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*
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********************************
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or
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****
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*** **
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**************************** *
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________________________________ *
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\ *
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| *
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________________________________/ *
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*
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*
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********************************
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As you see, the exit is wider for speed. More likely the car will slide in
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this method.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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-c)Drifting:Yes it's possible...........
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Method 1-Out in out:
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Since your car is more likely adjusted to drifting, this technique can easily
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break the traction.
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Method 2-Inertia Drift:
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Ok. You break into the turn, and as you do that, let go of the gas. Once you
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engage into the turn, hit the gas or brake, depending whether you're in a
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tight or wide turn. Thats it really. This technique broke the traction. This
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technique works by first shifting the weight distribution to induce a bit
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