- 1,101
- GTP_EA11R
What? Leo, you changed Mister Black's settings? The initial settings were so wonderful, I can't imagine that you've done anything but worsen the car. Of course, I had to try it out.
To start with, though, we need to remember exactly what made the first Mister Black such an excellent tune. The cornering speeds were astronomical compared to the stock tune; around Trial Mountain, the tuned and untuned versions of the car were in entirely different classes. The untuned MR-2 was a hooligan in the corners: On the brakes, the whole thing pitched forward with the enthusiasm of a puppy, the throttle made theToyota rear up on its hind legs and head straight on into the outside wall, S-turns nearly flipped the damn thing over, and the body roll in steady cornering challenged the driver's knowledge of the course, his vision obscured. The tune eliminated all of these problems, house-training the puppy, making it taut through the turns, swift due to the improved gear ratios, and controllable as well. Just enough of the weight transfer was left, allowing too-late braking to be countered with lift-off oversteer. Wonderful, if I'm honest.
The subtle suspension alterations you made changed the feel of the car a bit. Noticable weight transfer was completely gone, and the car is now completely civilized, an autocross course would be honoured to have such a precise instrument running over it. If you brake too late, there is a tiny amount of lift-off oversteer, not even noticable in regular racing. It comes instantly, at full strength, then doesn't exceed this amount at all, undoubtedly due to the effects of increased demand and camber. The saving effects of lift-off oversteer are tiny, but the fact is simple: Making mistakes with this takes talent. The steering recalls brain surgery, its improved (and incredible) precision emphasized by the lack of weight transfer. It felt, instantly, that the car knew exactly what to do; It felt like the car had more talent than me! In a ghost battle, it seems that cornering speeds are either unchanged or dropped slightly (2 mph, maximum), but cornering is much more exquisite and precise with the slight change. However, the advertised oversteer of this car is conspicuously absent. It has been replaced by precision, which is more than enough.
Somehow, Leo, you've actually managed to improve your heroic MR-2. Excellent, excellent job.
Also, ________, I tested your __________. I'm slightly dissappointed that the tuned version of the car isn't very different from the stock version of the car. __________s are well-behaved, swift cars, and you've tuned your version of it to be slightly faster and slightly more well-behaved. Don't misunderstand me, I prefer the tuned version to the stock tune--you've been wise with the transmission tuning, corners pass a beat quicker, and the lift-off oversteer of the ordinary __________ has been reduced to a better amount--but I miss the sense of complete transformation that I've found in other tuned cars from you. If you have the car and parts, by all means, apply the settings, but it's not worth buying and tuning the rather expensive __________ just for the settings.
Fill in blanks with either [Greycap, NSX] or [Leonidae, Volkswagen R32].
To start with, though, we need to remember exactly what made the first Mister Black such an excellent tune. The cornering speeds were astronomical compared to the stock tune; around Trial Mountain, the tuned and untuned versions of the car were in entirely different classes. The untuned MR-2 was a hooligan in the corners: On the brakes, the whole thing pitched forward with the enthusiasm of a puppy, the throttle made theToyota rear up on its hind legs and head straight on into the outside wall, S-turns nearly flipped the damn thing over, and the body roll in steady cornering challenged the driver's knowledge of the course, his vision obscured. The tune eliminated all of these problems, house-training the puppy, making it taut through the turns, swift due to the improved gear ratios, and controllable as well. Just enough of the weight transfer was left, allowing too-late braking to be countered with lift-off oversteer. Wonderful, if I'm honest.
The subtle suspension alterations you made changed the feel of the car a bit. Noticable weight transfer was completely gone, and the car is now completely civilized, an autocross course would be honoured to have such a precise instrument running over it. If you brake too late, there is a tiny amount of lift-off oversteer, not even noticable in regular racing. It comes instantly, at full strength, then doesn't exceed this amount at all, undoubtedly due to the effects of increased demand and camber. The saving effects of lift-off oversteer are tiny, but the fact is simple: Making mistakes with this takes talent. The steering recalls brain surgery, its improved (and incredible) precision emphasized by the lack of weight transfer. It felt, instantly, that the car knew exactly what to do; It felt like the car had more talent than me! In a ghost battle, it seems that cornering speeds are either unchanged or dropped slightly (2 mph, maximum), but cornering is much more exquisite and precise with the slight change. However, the advertised oversteer of this car is conspicuously absent. It has been replaced by precision, which is more than enough.
Somehow, Leo, you've actually managed to improve your heroic MR-2. Excellent, excellent job.
Also, ________, I tested your __________. I'm slightly dissappointed that the tuned version of the car isn't very different from the stock version of the car. __________s are well-behaved, swift cars, and you've tuned your version of it to be slightly faster and slightly more well-behaved. Don't misunderstand me, I prefer the tuned version to the stock tune--you've been wise with the transmission tuning, corners pass a beat quicker, and the lift-off oversteer of the ordinary __________ has been reduced to a better amount--but I miss the sense of complete transformation that I've found in other tuned cars from you. If you have the car and parts, by all means, apply the settings, but it's not worth buying and tuning the rather expensive __________ just for the settings.
Fill in blanks with either [Greycap, NSX] or [Leonidae, Volkswagen R32].