There's a lot to be said for learning tracks on a decent racing game.
Anyone been on an F1 simulator? Went on one at Weston-super-Mare pier on the way back from Devon once. Amazingly real, got off that thing sweating my gonads off.F1 drivers do this for days in the winter.
No, never - one for the bucket list though.Anyone been on an F1 simulator? Went on one at Weston-super-Mare pier on the way back from Devon once. Amazingly real, got off that thing sweating my gonad*s off.
Outrun was the best driving game though
No, never - one for the bucket list though.
Don't play much now and was never really into racing games.There's a lot to be said for learning tracks on a decent racing game.
That looks the biz, F1 does nothing for me but I'd love to try rallying.Forgotten how good it was.
Driving in a sim will never teach you to drive quickly, but it will teach you tracks.Don't play much now and was never really into racing games.
Drove a lot when I was young so sitting behind a wheel in my spare time wasn't high on my list.
Also there isn't, or wasn't, that connection with car or road. Even now driving an automatic in real life does not feel right, there's a real lack of control without a clutch.
I play video games, it's a good release valve.
Generally I don't play football games, I've never understood why learning to hit buttons in a set order quickly would make you think you'd be a footballer, golfer, ninja, racing driver or killing machine.
They have very little, if any, actually similarity to the real world.
Great fun, but not real.
Driving in a sim will never teach you to drive quickly, but it will teach you tracks.
Track rendering is so good now, that when I turned up at Spa I could recognise the braking points I was going to use as my start points. I knew which kerbs were flat and which were raised, I knew which you could ride all the way around and which had lumps in. I knew where the astroturf behaved like track and where it behaved like grass. I knew which parts of the track to stay away from in the wet - I even learned that the exit line from the endurance pit is really slippy in the rain and needs to be avoided. I knew where the weight transfer was at its most extreme and where the camber tipped away on acceleration.
All of those things saved me hours of on-track learning and allowed me to go straight out and enjoy the track much faster than I would have done initially.
It's even better if you can find something similar to what you will be using on a track. You obviously don't get the feel through the seat in any way that matters, but usually replays will show you if you oversteered because you clipped a line or because the camber tipped, etc. I couldn't find a match, but found that using an M5, I got a feel for what driving a family saloon with good handling was like.Ob they've come along way since I played them, might dig out my wheel and give one a go.
Track racing never really appealed to me until a couple of years ago, now I'd probably have a go. Middle age crisis, me? No don't be silly.
It's even better if you can find something similar to what you will be using on a track. You obviously don't get the feel through the seat in any way that matters, but usually replays will show you if you oversteered because you clipped a line or because the camber tipped, etc. I couldn't find a match, but found that using an M5, I got a feel for what driving a family saloon with good handling was like.
And talking of mid-life crises - the car I learned to drive quickly in was a MK3 MR2. I'll be buying one in the next few months to turn into a trackday car. I could/should probably but something more suited to a track car, but that wouldn't have the nostalgic feel of a car from my younger days.
That's why I want to strip out and power up an MR2 - wheels on the corners, weight in the middle, RWD, etc. It's also cheap enough that if the Armco and I have a disagreement, it won't hurt the wallet too much.I grew up driving my dad's car, a nova, and vans in the 80s.covered huge mileage in the van 2000+ a week at times.
Best car I've ever driven purely for the drive was my sis in laws mini. It was awesome, so responsive, could throw it around, cornered like it was on rails, loved it. Not hugely fast in the straight but on a twisty you get around almost without brakes. Probably just as well mind you as they were crap.
If nostalgia and cars from your youth is the thing, why aren't you buying a T-ford then?It's even better if you can find something similar to what you will be using on a track. You obviously don't get the feel through the seat in any way that matters, but usually replays will show you if you oversteered because you clipped a line or because the camber tipped, etc. I couldn't find a match, but found that using an M5, I got a feel for what driving a family saloon with good handling was like.
And talking of mid-life crises - the car I learned to drive quickly in was a MK3 MR2. I'll be buying one in the next few months to turn into a trackday car. I could/should probably but something more suited to a track car, but that wouldn't have the nostalgic feel of a car from my younger days.
fudge you funny man - I'm not even nearly that old.If nostalgia and cars from your youth is the thing, why aren't you buying a T-ford then?
Road Rash? Think I had that on the mega drive, brought out the violent streak in me!
You could get sacked on Championship Manager. That's how I know exactly how Steve Bruce feels on a regular basis*. I pontificate about it from my armchair down the pub on a regular basis.Silly me, clicking on this thread expecting to see managerial sackings being discussed...
Road Rash? Think I had that on the mega drive, bought out the violent streak in me!
Here's a real life one:Silly me, clicking on this thread expecting to see managerial sackings being discussed...