Rally tips

  • Thread starter hhhwa
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I've had all the GT's and on GT 3 i was a dab hand at the rally winning all of them easily, but Rallying on GT5? well im pretty dry. I know what cars to use but how to use them? no. Has anyone got any tips on driving aids/ driving techniques/ etc ? Cheers
 
First thing to do - switch off traction control (if not by default).

Brake carefully, never overshoot. Slow in, fast out is MANDATORY. For most medium/slow speed corner, controlled power slide should be used. I usually provoke the car gently by braking oversteer, stab of the throttle or scandinavian flip (turning first to the opposite direction and then to the corner to loosen the tail). You should be sliding gently, not full power and maximum attack/angle. This is not drift excersize!
Once into a slide, try to keep the nose towards the exit of the corner, modulating the power and correcting with steering. Ideally, steering input should be minimum.
Most corners require that slide to be induced BEFORE entering the corner and aiming at the apex.
Cut the as much as you can (obviously).

Keep in mind that there could be different styles and techniques, which are just as fast in the end (like more aggressive sliding (e.g. Finish drivers) or precise/clean track style approach (e.g. Loeb) or something in between).

I guess you have troubles with the Sebastian Loeb challanges. These are not easy, but not that hard either and great fun (esp. the ice one). You should not dishearten and repeat until you get it right. Satisfaction will be huge in the end.

The other Rallies (with the generated tracks) shouldn't be that hard, due to car freedom and over-wide roads.

I am a Colin MacRae Rally/dirt series fan. To say the truth, rallying is a little bit clumsy in GT5, esp. those generated stuff on wide flowing roads. Loeb challanges are much better and more like the real thing.

Good luck, I hope this helps.
 
First thing to do - switch off traction control (if not by default).

Brake carefully, never overshoot. Slow in, fast out is MANDATORY. For most medium/slow speed corner, controlled power slide should be used. I usually provoke the car gently by braking oversteer, stab of the throttle or scandinavian flip (turning first to the opposite direction and then to the corner to loosen the tail). You should be sliding gently, not full power and maximum attack/angle. This is not drift excersize!
Once into a slide, try to keep the nose towards the exit of the corner, modulating the power and correcting with steering. Ideally, steering input should be minimum.
Most corners require that slide to be induced BEFORE entering the corner and aiming at the apex.
Cut the as much as you can (obviously).

Keep in mind that there could be different styles and techniques, which are just as fast in the end (like more aggressive sliding (e.g. Finish drivers) or precise/clean track style approach (e.g. Loeb) or something in between).

I guess you have troubles with the Sebastian Loeb challanges. These are not easy, but not that hard either and great fun (esp. the ice one). You should not dishearten and repeat until you get it right. Satisfaction will be huge in the end.

The other Rallies (with the generated tracks) shouldn't be that hard, due to car freedom and over-wide roads.

I am a Colin MacRae Rally/dirt series fan. To say the truth, rallying is a little bit clumsy in GT5, esp. those generated stuff on wide flowing roads. Loeb challanges are much better and more like the real thing.

Good luck, I hope this helps.


thanks for the tips. can you please post your car's tune?
 
Put traction on 5 abs off and always full throttle, i got gold by 4 seconds on the Sébastien Loeb Challenge (Toscana), using a dual shock 3 controller, like that :)
 
I'm the type of driver that uses 5 TCS, Skid recovery On, and ABS 1. But when I do Rally I take ALL of the aids off which helps out a lot!

When it comes to driving make sure you brake early and try to get some oversteer in before the turn, use some throttle control to keep your car facing the right direction out of the turn so you can accelerate quick out. That way on the (2) turns I was able to get through them without dropping below 40mph at times.

As far as tuning what helped me out a lot was setting the transmission to higher rpms, this helps lessen the slipping of your tires when coming out of corners. I didn't mess with suspension too much, but keep the ride height at 0 or more and keep the suspension low for the bumps. However when you do the tarmac courses you can follow the normal racing specs such as low ride height etc. The Torque Sensing Differential Settings for me seemed to best suit my driving at 50/50
 
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