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-   -   Newb Here!!! (https://www.rx7club.com/3rd-generation-specific-1993-2002-16/newb-here-92442/)

FDdRIFTER2 06-29-02 08:48 PM

Newb Here!!!
 
Hey all,
Well this is my first post, but I've been reading on this forum for about a few months and I just wanted to thank all of you for all the information you gave me and I can't wait till I get my T2 when I turn 16. I will be saving up for my FD when I'm older. Is the FC a good car for my first car? I've been reading a lot about rotary engines and I hope to learn more. Any help is appreciated.

Thanks

neoamd 06-29-02 08:55 PM

Im 16 and have a FD. Its a awesome car. Just wait and drive your parents car. Its worth it..

wozzoom 06-29-02 09:04 PM

FCs are great first cars as long as you don't get a turbo. :D NA's are by far the easiest, cheapest, and most reliable of all RX-7s. Turbos are fast but you pay for that with higher maintenance costs.

Look for an 89-91 GTUs. That will give you the most bang for the buck.

JoeD 06-29-02 09:04 PM

Johnny!

FD3S LIGHTNING 06-29-02 09:20 PM

welcome to the forum. Good luck on the car

FDdRIFTER2 06-29-02 10:38 PM

Thanks for your help. I'm probably going to get a N/A FC. I want to make it a drift car. Do the N/A FC's work well as drift cars?

FD3S LIGHTNING 06-29-02 10:43 PM

This is the advised order that you should follow:

1. Learn how to drift race.
2. Build drift car.


:)

PureSephiroth 06-29-02 11:22 PM

you can't learn to drift untill you have the car...

I know so many techniques and tricks and all sorts of crap about drifting, but you put me in a car and I would crash that thing sooo fast. No i'm just joking. Good strategy, you sound just like me. I'm looking for an RX-7 once I turn 16 too. And I want to drift it. I love touge racing, it so exciting. Anyway, good to see drifters no matter what kind of car they drive right? Oh by the way, I heard that to drift an FC the TII works better because the extra power allows you to spin the wheels easier. This is just what someone told me though, they could be full of it. I do know however that in Japan, the TII is a more popular drifting car than the N/A FC. Personally, I want to go with the TII. Good Luck and godspeed man. Get a good FC, and treat it well. I hate seeing good cars... go bad...

FDdRIFTER2 06-30-02 01:20 AM

Yeah, I might for with the T2. They say it has more power potential. Thanks for the info.

FDdRIFTER2 06-30-02 01:25 AM

I have another question, what car is better for drifting, FC or FD. Sorry but after all this Initial D, highway races seem boring.

gnobesav 06-30-02 01:54 AM

If you're an Initial D fan, why not just go straight out and get an AE86? :p: Anyways, I like drifting on the FD quite well but I've never driven an FC, so I don't really have much comparison.

itrdanny2001 06-30-02 02:07 AM

some people are unbelievable.

you don't have a car and you're planning on drift racing with your first car? I mean I saw Initial D too, and I read options and watch the videos. Those guys in the videos are not 16 year olds. The guys at Signal Auto are pretty old. My point is: learn to drive before you learn to drift.

You're only 16 and you've got your whole life, and many cars, ahead of you.

7sweetie 06-30-02 02:30 AM

i agree, i know rx-7s are exciting, but make sure and get a feel for the car and become an experienced driver before you go and try to drift your car and then crash it and add to the long list of rx7's we dont have anymore.

artowar2 06-30-02 02:38 AM

You want practice drifting? Move to where it snows, get a beater rwd car, and find a big empty parking lot. You can drift all you want at low speeds. Just make sure that you know what's under the snow :)

FDdRIFTER2 06-30-02 03:01 AM

I am taking drivers ed this year but i dont think it will help.

IwannaFC 06-08-03 04:50 PM

there arent any na Fc's in japan, there all turbo, even the convertibles.

GarageBoy 06-08-03 05:30 PM

Hey!
Take some drivering courses such as Skip Barber first. It'll help you later on

diablone 06-08-03 06:32 PM


Originally posted by itrdanny2001
My point is: learn to drive before you learn to drift.

This is right on. Don't even think of drifting until you have more then enough experience with driving itself and driving your car. Just because you think you can, doesn't mean you can.

911GT2 06-08-03 09:18 PM

who brought this back from a year ago? Is the originator still around? Wow. But good advice non-the-less.


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