taleed wrote:Some comments in this topic said that F1 drivers are racers because they can't drift and vice versa. Those comments appear to be false as to my supporting evidence.
I believe Rossi isn't a F1 driver and rallying doesn't equal drifting.
You would be very, VERY, slow, if you drifted in rally. That's just not something you'll do, if you want to be fast. Surely the car isn't driven like on track, but it's nowhere near drifting either.
Please, please, please, pretty please with cherry and sugar on top. Sliding the car a bit is as close to drifting as flooring the throttle is to racing. There's a lot more into it.
Tom wrote:I've no doubt circuit racers can drift, not aswell as rally drivers I reakon, but I doubt many rally drivers can apex every corner in Suzuka, let alone for 60 odd laps.
We just have to wait and see when the rally drivers decide to have a day of fun and drive around Suzuka to see.
While we're waiting for that, enjoy the Race of Champions, should be in early December. They invite the best circuit and rally drivers to compete against each other with several different cars, including tracktoys and WRC cars. Last year Loeb won it, the year before that Kovalainen won it. What's interesting is that often circuit and rally drivers are quite even, no matter what the car is.
Here's some info about it, for those who never heard of it (can there be any?):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Race_of_Champions
More on that matter, I'm not sure if it's just the finns, but former F1 drivers seem to like to participate on some rallying every now and then. Mika Hakkinen does it, Mika Salo does it, JJ Lehto does, even Keke Rosberg still does it. But in the end they are more or less just racing against each other, without being even close to the fastest guys. Surely they could be faster, if they just trained more, but I'm still not convinced that a circuit driver could be good in letting the car loose, if he's been avoiding that for his life and got good at it.