snstevens
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Sam
- Joined
- Jul 10, 2020
- Threads
- 31
- Messages
- 1,334
- Reaction score
- 1,739
- Location
- Kirkland, WA United States
- Vehicles
- Taycan 4S
Man, I envy you! Lucky dog...I had a reasonable length trip on a range of different roads taking my grandson to be shown around Red Bull Racing by an old colleague and friend (and serial GT3 owner he had picked up his latest touring on Monday) so tried a few things.
Mine definitely "kicks down" when flooring the throttle and I feel it but its nowhere near as slow as a typical auto or manual IC engined car.
It is also nowhere near as bad as the lag of any of the turbo cars I have driven or owned either.
I am so used to (and like) the coast on lift off I didn't like the Sport setting for general use both for that and the markedly poorer ride.
I did try hooliganing around a few corners and roundabouts on low traffic bits and Sport is definitely better for sliding the car, but not by that much, so again, not enough for me to leave it there.
Normal turns out to be a very well judged set of settings for my taste.
The car has great grip and balance!
Very OT!
It is 13 years since I retired from Formula 1 and the rules have changed a lot but I was staggered how many people there are now and how complex that allows them tomake the parts.
Williams GP Engineering was 23 people when I joined and we made the fastest car and won the Championship the following season and started to grow, we were fairly dominant for the next few years and grew to around 100 people before I moved.
Red Bull Racing does do their own power train but they have 1700 people and Mercedes the same.
Going to races to run the car is not quite such a personal experience any more.
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