Inertia Drift

Ill keep this short, can anyone do an inertial drift? if you can show us all because I have never seen an inertial drift mentioned or captured of that sort in these forums..if you can, show us what you can do :) Inertial Drift- Not using any techniques such as feint motion, and braking. You have to go in full speed and let the tires slide naturally while controlling the car.(Crazy isnt it?)
 
i post one up, give me like an hour cause i am on 56k...hahaha maybe not...30 mins tops

-edit- here it is, sorry for the long wait. not sure if its inertia drifting or just linking drifts but here it is

Click
 
well if you want to give a definition of it, at least spell it right. its inertia. correct me if i am wrong but take a look at this
inertia drift = Scandinavian flick
Scandinavian flick = feint drift

if that is true than wont inertia drift = feint drift?

-edit-
AznInfiltration
Inertial Drift- Not using any techniques such as feint motion, and braking. You have to go in full speed and let the tires slide naturally while controlling the car.(Crazy isnt it?)

i think that the definition you gave is wrong, inertia drift has to do with the transfer of weight, which is the same thing as a feint drift
 
Inertial Drift- Not using any techniques such as feint motion, and braking. You have to go in full speed and let the tires slide naturally while controlling the car.(Crazy isnt it?)

Isn't that just plain ol' oversteer? =)


inertia - The tendency of a body to resist acceleration; the tendency of a body at rest to remain at rest or of a body in straight line motion to stay in motion in a straight line unless acted on by an outside force.

In this case, we're talking about the weight of the car resisting to move from traveling in a straight line, in conjunction with traction provided by the tires. Obviously, steering breaks 'inertia.'

Although this next analogy may be incorrect, inertia could be described as linking turns in a drift, meaning keeping the car in drifting mode by swinging back and forth, while keeping constant control and speed of the car.. same idea as feinting, but more than just using feint drift to break traction. it's that momentum/motion that you keep that could be described as inertia... however, this analogy might be wrong because the idea of inertia is resistance.
 
Sheron

Good stuff sheron. Not to mention very true.

Drifter5 is quite correct, inertia drifting is another way to shift the weight of the car. Generally speaking it's the same as feinting, with a different name.
 
AznInfiltration
Inertial Drift- Not using any techniques such as feint motion, and braking. You have to go in full speed and let the tires slide naturally while controlling the car.(Crazy isnt it?)
that definition sounds like just plain fun to me and my style from time to time :sly:
 
I got the definition from the GT Reference manual but i put it into my words a little so yeah..Just post some vids of your kansei drifts..thats why i posted this thread
 
AznInfiltration
I got the definition from the GT Reference manual but i put it into my words a little so yeah..Just post some vids of your kansei drifts..thats why i posted this thread

As stated before, there are plenty of vids of people doing that in the Drift Video Forum. have a look.
 
I don't see apoint in bickering over the differences in names of styles, I think the names we use for the styles we use are plenty good.
I'm not saying "get the names right or don't even mention 'em," I'm just saying, this thread is headed in a pointless direction.

Swift action may be needed,

< Vin >
 
I'm pretty sure the guy who started this thread was thinking of, what keiichi tsuchiya refers to as "dynamic drifting." Which is just turning into a corner, full-throttle and drifting at extremely high speed through the corner. At least that's what the drift bible describes it as.

Inertia Drifting is what Takumi does when he first shows up behind Keisuke's FD in Initial D. It's when he links the two corners without ever having traction, throwing the weight of the car, violently, to the other side, but only in the rear end. And then Keisuke goes "INERTIA DRIFTU?!?!!?!?!?!@!@#" Remember?

Well, maybe some of you do.
 
yeah that definition of inertia drift was retarded. its throwing the car in the opposite direction of the turn before reaching it throwing the wheels into a slide and then quickly throwing the weight back to the outside of the turn turning the nose to the inside and creating a controlled slide *drift*. :sly: oh yeah TAKUMI PWNZ ALL!
 
Drifting without trying? Sounds like every corner I think about maybe negotiating perhaps in an Alpine :scared:

feint or inertial drifting as subsequintly described.... do you all mean the Scandinavian Flick?
 
burnout060
I'm pretty sure the guy who started this thread was thinking of, what keiichi tsuchiya refers to as "dynamic drifting." Which is just turning into a corner, full-throttle and drifting at extremely high speed through the corner. At least that's what the drift bible describes it as.

Inertia Drifting is what Takumi does when he first shows up behind Keisuke's FD in Initial D. It's when he links the two corners without ever having traction, throwing the weight of the car, violently, to the other side, but only in the rear end. And then Keisuke goes "INERTIA DRIFTU?!?!!?!?!?!@!@#" Remember?

Well, maybe some of you do.
EXACTLY what i meant..
 
👍 like drift one way then switch to other? if thas the case i can...example in breakerohio's online d1 final....im me for the vid cause it is expired...i did it on trial mnt turn #'s 1 to 2 with front cam pointed at car....i think thas what it looks like tell me if not.
 
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