I know it looks like a race car, but it drove the official record for road going cars. This was a prototype...Originally Posted by Matra et Alpine
I know it looks like a race car, but it drove the official record for road going cars. This was a prototype...Originally Posted by Matra et Alpine
"The best thing about this is that you know that it has to come from a country where drugs is legal"
Top Gear on the Vandenbrink Carver One
I don't know if this still is a issue here but I didn't notice this before.
And I just wanted to say some things about it.
Do you really think that the lap times on GT4 are realistic? I did a 6:50 lap with my Amuse R1 300bhp and road tyres without hitting the walls at any time. And now the really crazy times are comming up Audi R8 5:56 (me), Nissan R89C Race Car 5:34 (a friend), Sauber Mercedes C 9 Race Car 5:29 (a friend) and those were all laps that we didn't hit the wall at any time. Then there was this one lap that my friend did with the Sauber 5:17, but it wasn't as "pretty" as the others (he hitted the wall in some places pretty hard)Originally Posted by netburner
By the way my PGR2 time on the ring is 6:28 on the ring. And in Forza i have managed something like 7:30 in a Zonda GR in a race i know it's not fast.
Did anybody was there?
In GT4, the times are only accurate w/ road-tires. Once you go into sport/racing tires, the times are off by A LOT.
Rockefella says:
pat's sister is hawt
David Fiset says:
so is mine
David Fiset says:
do want
Thats the point. My oppinion is only about laps with roadlegal wheels and roadlegal cars. That laptimes are compareable to the real world. And, as I said before, even then you will be faster at the PlayStation, because you can get higher risks, because you won't be hurt in case of a crash.Originally Posted by Rockefella
I know, that times with slicks and real sport cars are faster than they should be. One point which should be better in GT5.
WRC - That's motorsport!
"If you can see the tree you are about to hit, it is called 'understeering'. If you can only hear and feel it, it was 'oversteering'."
Walter Röhrl
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