Racing Cars Menu

F1
Dragsters
WRC
Tuning
NASCAR
Truck Racing
Demolition Derby
Drifting
Rallycross

Most Expensive Supercars in 2008

New Cars

Maserati GranTurismo  picture
Ferrari California
Tesla Roadster picture
Tramontana
Nissan Skyline GT-R picture
Breckland Beira

Drifting

Two drifting carsBasically, drifting is getting your car sideways down a road.Instead of a drifter causing a drift and then countering to straighten out, he will instead over-counter so his car goes into another drift. That is the reason many drifters do it in the mountains, because there are many sharp turns strung together. So in essence a good drifter has the ability to take five or six opposing turns without having traction at any point in time. There are two ways to start a drift. The first is the clutching technique. When approaching a turn the driver will push in the clutch and shift his car into second gear. Then rev the engine up to around 4000-5000 rpm (it all depends all the model of the car being used) and then slightly turn away from the turn and then cut back towards it hard while at the same time popping the clutch and causing the rear wheels to spin. At this point the drifter has a loss of traction and is beginning to slide around the curve. Now comes the hard part. You have to hold the drift until the next turn. To do this you must keep your foot on the accelerator while at the same time adjusting your car with the steering wheel so you don't spin out. It's not as easy as it sounds. Then as the drifter reaches the end of the turn and approaches the next turn which is in the opposite direction he must cut the Modern drifting started out as a racing technique popular in the All Japan Touring Car Championship races over 30 years ago. driftingA motorcycling legend turned driver, Kunimitsu Takahashi , was the foremost creator of drifting techniques in the 1970's. He was famous for hitting the apex (the point where the car is closest to the inside of a turn) at high speed and then drifting through the corner, preserving a high exit speed. This earned him several championships and a legion of fans who enjoyed the spectacle of burning tires. Nowadays, drifting has evolved into a competitive sport where drivers compete in rear-wheel drive cars to keep their cars sideways as long as possible. At the top levels of competition, especially the D1 Grand Prix from Japan and others in Malaysia , Australia , the Republic of Ireland , the United Kingdom , Formula-D in the United States , and New Zealand (who remain as the fastest drifters worldwide, entering some corners at an excess of 210km) these drivers are able to keep their cars sliding for extended periods of time, often through several turns.