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23-03-2010, 11:39 AM | #241 | |||
Fordaholic
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http://blog.motorists.org/pros-cons-...l-wheel-drive/ http://www.carsdirect.com/car-buying...ar-wheel-drive And heres one where the RWD are better in the wet. http://www.popularmechanics.com/auto...31.html?page=3 Last edited by cosmo20btt; 23-03-2010 at 11:52 AM. |
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23-03-2010, 11:53 AM | #242 | ||||
Ich bin ein auslander
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Your first link makes no reference to the situation that you presented, relevance? Neither does the second link, again relevance? The third link has nothing to do with slide control, aquaplaning or vehicle safety, again relevance? Interestingly, both the first two links stated that FWD is better on slippery, snow or wet roads. So you have presented articles that contradict your own statements. Stop being so easy to shoot down.
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23-03-2010, 12:28 PM | #243 | ||
Fordaholic
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My point being not so much about handling in the wet but a little safer maybe as this comes down to the driver, there is about 55% to 45% distribution or near to weight on a RWD car so in the wet you still have this about 45% weight on the back wheels (but this can work against you if you have bad rear tyres) as the front is not doing a nose dive because of aquaplaning from the front, and a FWD has as high as 90% to 10% distribution to the wheels so much so that all front drive cars brakes these days are diagonally left front to right rear and visa versa as there is practically no braking on the rear (next time you walk past a small to middle size FWD car check how small the rear brakes are). The first two links are in regards to the FWD vs RWD and they back what other on this site have posted, and the third link is directly aimed at driving in the wet as that was what the test was about.
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23-03-2010, 01:07 PM | #244 | ||
Ich bin ein auslander
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I actually own a small FWD so I know the brakes size, RWD have smaller rear brakes too, proportionately so in most cases. This is actually bought about the fact that 70-80 percent of braking power is done by the front wheels on all vehicles. Look at motor bikes, they often have large twin rotors on the front and smaller single on the rear. My SP has a 320mm rear rotor with single piston caliper and smaller pad than the 355mm front rotor with 6 piston caliper, why? Because the rear does not have to be as large. Why is this so? Because every car or bike (or whatever) transfer its mass forward when it decelerates and therefore the fronts have the highest tyre pressure on the road and therefore grip.
As for suggesting that a FWD has a 90% front and 10% rear weight distribution, no way. It is more like about 60/40 or there about. Hell, even my mini with almost no back seat does not have a 90/10 split, at 1100kgs, if it did that would mean I could physically pick up the rear of the car by myself (I can't). I still stand by my statement that your 3rd link is irrelevant as it was talking during acceleration, not deceleration so completely different dynamics are at work in this test. If FWD are so poor from a decelleration point of view on wet roads, why is it in a braking exercise at a club skid pan day (wet skid pan), did our Mini consistently pull up in a shorter distance than all the late model XR8's and FPV's? Could it be perhaps because that increased weight bias to the front actually assists braking in wet conditions? When you look at the physics of it, of course it is. By the way, I am not trying to get "jollies" here, just trying to dispel crazy myths that are not backed up with science, prove me wrong. My closing point, in an emergency situation on a wet road, the FWD is equally and in some occasions superior to the RWD, all other variables constant.
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23-03-2010, 01:09 PM | #245 | ||||||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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23-03-2010, 01:10 PM | #246 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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23-03-2010, 01:21 PM | #247 | |||
Ich bin ein auslander
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23-03-2010, 01:38 PM | #248 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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oh man FWD bashers you are losing terribly concede defeat already - and whats more you are losing as a direct result of one the highly knowledgeable geckogt I have been waiting in the winds to throw weight behind his (and my) arguments, but my input has not been required good job geckogt tell them how it is thumbs up to you friend. Neither is superior to the other and an overall fast car is dependant on so many other variables than just how it delivers its power to the ground tyre choice road surface and driver ability play a larger part individually than the power delivery system so combined their influence is over 3x that of the mode of power delivery (FW,RW & AW Drive) it is such a small percentage of what makes a fast laptime.
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23-03-2010, 02:18 PM | #249 | |||
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23-03-2010, 02:30 PM | #250 | |||
Ich bin ein auslander
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There is possibility for a logical assumption that increased front weight bias on FWD lends itself to better braking in poor grip conditions. This is not an unfounded assumption from a physics point of view as weight on the front wheels results in more ground pressure and therefore more grip. Because of the weight shift during braking on FWD, RWD and AWD vehicles, increasing back brake pressure often just results in locked wheels, not increased braking power, that is why all cars have larger front brakes than rear. All I am saying, is that being FWD is not a disadvantage in control and stopping in wet conditions as was suggested in the post that was put forward and that sparked this line of discussion.
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23-03-2010, 02:44 PM | #251 | |||
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23-03-2010, 02:49 PM | #252 | |||
Ich bin ein auslander
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Without doubt, but who wants to go faster when the car is already aquaplaning and out of control?
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23-03-2010, 03:06 PM | #253 | ||
GT4.
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I think some of you RWD blokes need to read up or take a good FWD car for a spin. There are SHOCKING examples of both RWD and FWD cars.
Gecko again you take the words out of my mouth. My F6 has the Brembos up front and the single potter at the back. Little Jean Claude has larger diameter fronts than backs. Same deal in both worlds! Braking power is always highly concentrated to the front (unless we drive everywhere in reverse). There is no need for high braking bias to the back. It's why we have Electronic Braking Distribution. To ensure that braking power otherwise wasted at the rear of the car is concentrated to the front of the car. It's a matter of driving physics.... |
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23-03-2010, 03:11 PM | #254 | ||
FORMERLY TX3DUDE
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Its just a point i was trying to make (sorry its actually unrelated to your discussion)
The advantages and disadvantages such as weight distribution are not limited to the drive delivery system but they are inherent. so a rwd with the same weight distribution as a fwd will break just as well, a fwd with the same weight distribution as a rwd will accelerate just as well and so on and so forth. However when you strip away all that could be common to both systems(isolating only that which makes them different) RWD as a system is then( and perhaps only then) shown to be superior as a system(ok jpd80 other than the snow handling) |
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23-03-2010, 03:42 PM | #255 | |||
FORMERLY TX3DUDE
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Agreed about the shocking examples. |
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23-03-2010, 05:29 PM | #256 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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kinda cope but when RWDs are fitted with proper snow tyres the playing field is a bit more level. Only problem is snow tyres can explode if you get them too hot.. I like RWDs to but I've copped a pizzling or two on Blue Oval News when debating Falcon vs Taurus merits with the FWD lovers... |
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24-03-2010, 02:55 PM | #257 | |||
Call me Spud
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24-03-2010, 03:18 PM | #258 | ||||
Nutty Professor
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Location: Brisbane, Australia
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The same thing happened to me in a laser, was cruising down the highway, doing 100 in a 110 zone because of rain. I hit some standing water and aquaplaned. The speedo shot from 100 to 140 instantly. I slipped it into neutral (automatic) in a vain attempt to regain traction, and as the road curved to the left I went spearing off into the far right lane, unable to steer. This is with the transmission in neutral and my feet off the pedals. This has also happened in a Falcon, which caused it so slip sideways a little bit, and I stayed in my lane and in control. Which brings me back to my original point. Having 50% of the wheels perform 90% of the car control is, physically, just a stupid way of doing it. Small FWD are fine, but having a large FWD is, engineering wise, akin to having a small, high powered RWD. It's just physically prone to do random ********** when you lease expect it.
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24-03-2010, 03:24 PM | #259 | |||
Zoom Zoom
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24-03-2010, 03:35 PM | #260 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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FFS this debate will go on for ever. The ironic thing is that the majority of protagonists here have very little ACTUAL driving experience in anything other than their "precious" and even then only in limited environments and so are just pushing someone else's agenda. I do know that at least one or two one here have a bit of track time and have done a lot of advanced driver training. Maybe some of the P plate experts should read more and write less. FWD has pros and cons RWD has pros and cons AWD has pros and cons No single platform is better or worse in any or all situations. This is even more silly than the V8 vs T6 babblefests....... |
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24-03-2010, 03:50 PM | #261 | |||
Nutty Professor
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Location: Brisbane, Australia
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FWD pros - Cheap, works in snow, good for small, light, agile cars.
FWD cons - Unsuitable for large cars, unsuitable for high power, prone to understeer, poor weight distribution. RWD cons - not as cheap, not as good in snow, bad for small cars. RWD pros - everything else.
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24-03-2010, 04:27 PM | #262 | |||
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24-03-2010, 04:35 PM | #263 | |||
Nutty Professor
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I'm sorry flappist I don't keep a diary to log the times and places of all the cars I drive.
I have driven and experienced a wide enough range of cars that I don't feel the need to answer to you. If you don't agree with what I'm saying, that's fine by me, but get off your high horse and join the discussion.
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24-03-2010, 04:39 PM | #264 | |||
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24-03-2010, 04:39 PM | #265 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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24-03-2010, 04:50 PM | #266 | ||||
Nutty Professor
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Mazda 121 ED XR8 ED Classic EL GLi AU Wagon BA XR6 BA XR8 Honda Civic Suzuki Vitara VN Commodore VS Commodore VE Commodore Various Toranas Nissan Exa Turbo R32 Skyline R33 Skline Toyota 4Runner Toyota Camry (model before latest) Toyota Aurion Toyota TRD Aurion Various 2WD and 4WD Hiluxes Various Corollas Focus XR5 Turbo Fiesta XR4 MkII Toyota Supra MkIII Toyota Supra MkIV Toyota Supra Various Toyota Landcruisers Mitsubishi Magna (1997) Mitsubishi Pajero (latish model) 1977 HZ Premier Wagon Various Geminis Mazda BT50 That's all I can think of right now. Will you climb down now flappist?
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24-03-2010, 05:00 PM | #267 | |||||
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24-03-2010, 05:11 PM | #268 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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You owned all these cars? Or just sat in them? |
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24-03-2010, 05:39 PM | #269 | |||
Ich bin ein auslander
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The fact that you say "The speedo shot from 100 to 140 instantly", means that you were not backing off the throttle when you hit the water. If you had backed of the throttle, the car would be slowing. You still had power on, there is no other logical explanation. When a car has its rolling wheels go from low resistance of a reasonably dry road to the high resistance of a large volume of water, the car velocity slows and the rotation speed of the wheels slow, not accelerate. I am also tipping that if you were having control problems in an area of high ground water, you probably should not be messing around reading speedos and shifting to neutral. Perhaps 100 may have been a bit too quick for large amounts of water on the road, what do you think? By the way, a list of car ownership that long, you must be 120 years old.
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24-03-2010, 10:06 PM | #270 | ||
U MAD?
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Someone please close this thread - The OP is a borderline troll and this thread is merely a FWD bashing session.
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