Drag racing is a competition in which specially prepared automobiles or motorcycles compete, usually two at a time, to be the first to cross a set finish line. The race follows a straight course from a standing start over a measured distance, most commonly ¼ mile (1,320 ft (400 m)) for most cars, with a shorter 1,000 ft (300 m) for Top Fuel dragsters and funny cars. Electronic timing and speed sensing systems have been used to record race results since the 1960s.
Before each race (also known as a pass), each driver is allowed to perform a burnout,
which heats the driving tires and lays rubber down at the beginning of
the track, improving traction. Each driver then lines up (or stages) at
the starting line. Races are started electronically by a system known as
a Christmas tree. The Christmas tree consists of a column of
lights for each driver/lane, one blue, then three amber, one green, and
one red, connected to light beams on the track. The first, a split blue
open circle, is split into two halves. When the first light beam is
broken by the vehicle's front tire(s) indicate that the driver has
pre-staged (approximately 7 inches (180 mm) from the starting line),
lights the first half of the blue circle, and then staged (at the
starting line), which lights up the second half of the blue circle, and
also the corresponding bar in the middle of that circle.
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
History of Drifting
Modern drifting as a sport started out as a racing technique popular in the All Japan Touring Car Championship races. Motorcycling legend turned driver, Kunimitsu Takahashi, was the foremost creator of drifting techniques in the 1970s. He is noted for hitting the apex
(the point where the car is closest to the inside of a turn) at high
speed and then drifting through the corner, preserving a high exit
speed. This earned him several championships and a legion of fans who
enjoyed the spectacle of smoking tires. The bias ply
racing tires of the 1960s-1980s lent themselves to driving styles with a
high slip angle. As professional racers in Japan drove this way, so did
the street racers.
Keiichi Tsuchiya (known as the Dorikin/Drift King) became particularly interested by Takahashi's drift techniques. Tsuchiya began practicing his drifting skills on the mountain roads of Japan, and quickly gained a reputation amongst the racing crowd. In 1987, several popular car magazines and tuning garages agreed to produce a video of Tsuchiya's drifting skills. The video, known as Pluspy, became a hit and inspired many of the professional drifting drivers on the circuits today. In 1988, alongside Option magazine founder and chief editor Daijiro Inada, he would help to organize one of the first events specifically for drifting called the D1 Grand Prix. He also drifted every turn in Tsukuba Circuit in Japan.
Kunimitsu Takahashi
Keiichi Tsuchiya (known as the Dorikin/Drift King) became particularly interested by Takahashi's drift techniques. Tsuchiya began practicing his drifting skills on the mountain roads of Japan, and quickly gained a reputation amongst the racing crowd. In 1987, several popular car magazines and tuning garages agreed to produce a video of Tsuchiya's drifting skills. The video, known as Pluspy, became a hit and inspired many of the professional drifting drivers on the circuits today. In 1988, alongside Option magazine founder and chief editor Daijiro Inada, he would help to organize one of the first events specifically for drifting called the D1 Grand Prix. He also drifted every turn in Tsukuba Circuit in Japan.
Kunimitsu Takahashi
Drifting
Drifting is a driving technique where the driver intentionally oversteers,
causing loss of traction in the rear wheels, while maintaining control
from entry to exit of a corner. A car is drifting when the rear slip angle
is greater than the front slip angle, to such an extent that often the
front wheels are pointing in the opposite direction to the turn (e.g.
car is turning left, wheels are pointed right or vice versa).
As a motorsport discipline, professional drifting competitions are held worldwide and are judged according to the speed, angle and line taken through a corner or set of corners.

As a motorsport discipline, professional drifting competitions are held worldwide and are judged according to the speed, angle and line taken through a corner or set of corners.

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