I hate the VXR forums sometimes

not sure exactly but i can somehow relate it to a rear wheel drive car with no limited slip diff.! well not quite the same but you know?!

(and yes i hate the VXR forums too:p)

You can't get a RWD car to torque steer, this is on account of no power going to the front wheels, you can get it to over and understeer but these aren't the same thing.
 
I've noticed torque steer in my old remapped diesel mondeo! It'll happen in most moderately powerful FWD cars. It's not a criticism of the Corsa in particular, it's just the way it is. Pretty much every review about the VXR on the internet will mention torque steer.

I think the people talking about torque steer in a 190bhp corsa are EXACTLY the people who've had experience driving fast FWD cars.

I don't dispute the presence of torque steer, merely the suffering from it.
 
I don't dispute the presence of torque steer, merely the suffering from it.

riiigghhtt, so will you retract your earlier "idiots" statement then?

You can't get a RWD car to torque steer, this is on account of no power going to the front wheels, you can get it to over and understeer but these aren't the same thing.

Perhaps if you had a 4WS RWD car you could get torque steer?? lol



I was having loads of torque steer in my prelude after the engine swap. I figured it was the JDM spec UBER torques combined with the new exhaust/manifold and downpipe. Turned out to be worn front top ball joints :p
 
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Stop trying to pretend you have Torques.

:D

Is torque steer a function of actual power, or is it how the power is delivered?

My current ST220 mondeo doesn't suffer at all, and yet has similar torque to my diesel mondeo. However, the power delivery of the V6 is pretty much linear, compared to the power 'curve' of the TDCi, which was almost vertical at about 2000rpm.

I take it the VXR Corsa doesn't have a front LSD or anything...
 
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Not at all, its a non issue, I still find complaining about something so minor and trivial to be idiotic.

turbo-induced torque steer throws you in all directions.
You'd have to be an idiot to suffer like this from the car.

too much torque steer
Again, too much torque steer suggests it's a problem; it isn't, therefore idiotic.
 
I don't dispute the presence of torque steer, merely the suffering from it.

So what is the point of all your previous points then?

We say all FWD has torque steer, even your £15,000 Corsa.

You say your Corsa doesn't suffer from it.

Then you say it doesn't suffer from it because you've never done any hard acceleration in it before.

You make a unbelievably frivolous claim that RWD cars have bigger problems involving hard acceleration than FWD does.

You say we aren't providing sources for our "claims" even though Google/Wiki etc is full of the exact information we provide.

Who do you think is the delusional one here?
 
I've noticed torque steer in my old remapped diesel mondeo! It'll happen in most moderately powerful FWD cars. It's not a criticism of the Corsa in particular, it's just the way it is. Pretty much every review about the VXR on the internet will mention torque steer.

I think the people talking about torque steer in a 190bhp corsa are EXACTLY the people who've had experience driving fast FWD cars.

This is why Peugeots and many other cars (I know the Saab 9-3 is another one) have intermediate bearings, so simulate the driveshafts being the same length for each wheel, resulting in much reduced/minimal torque steer.

RWD cars are unlikely to get it due to having the diff in the centre of the rear and so providing equal length drive shafts on each side.

I've driven low powered FWD cars and experienced it to some extent, so I can fully believe that the Corsa with it's high power does indeed get torque steer.
 
So what is the point of all your previous points then?

Because you keep dragging it around in circles.

You say your Corsa doesn't suffer from it.

It doesn't suffer, no.

Then you say it doesn't suffer from it because you've never done any hard acceleration in it before.

No, I said I've never done a hard launch.

You make a unbelievably frivolous claim that RWD cars have bigger problems involving hard acceleration than FWD does.

Yet again, you're either trying to twist what I'm saying, or you can't read; I said some RWD cars have bigger problems than torque steer.

Who do you think is the delusional one here?

I don't think anyone is delusional, you have a point to varying degrees with most of your arguments, that isn't to say you are out right correct, though.


InvaderGIR said:
This is why Peugeots and many other cars (I know the Saab 9-3 is another one) have intermediate bearings, so simulate the driveshafts being the same length for each wheel, resulting in much reduced/minimal torque steer.

Correct, a method GM/Vauxhall has used for a long time, now.
 
I'm not so sure about pointless, but they certainly don't solve the problem entirely.

But then, it isn't the only way to attack the problem, either.
 
I don't think anyone is delusional, you have a point to varying degrees with most of your arguments, that isn't to say you are out right correct, though.

You quoted and meaninglessly retorted every paragraph except the one about us providing Google/Wiki sources? Why miss out that one? Do you find it embarrasing?
 
Gosh this thread delivers doesn't it. First the Corsa VXR is 'probably the best all round car out there' then it doesnt torque steer.
 
I felt no need to respond to that, I think the "m3 torque steer" example took care of that just fine.

What are these sources going to tell me? Higher powered FWD cars have a tendency to torque steer, we all know this, am I missing your point?

[TW]Fox;15251827 said:
Gosh this thread delivers doesn't it. First the Corsa VXR is 'probably the best all round car out there' then it doesnt torque steer.

Again, I haven't said it doesn't torque steer, I said it doesn't suffer from it, ergo, it isn't a problem.
 
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