2TimingTom
Elite Explorer
- Joined
- October 12, 2010
- Messages
- 2,488
- Reaction score
- 112
- Location
- Littleton, CO
- City, State
- Littleton, Colorado
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- '97 XLT
Advantages of Rear-wheel Drive
Additionally, all race cars require the performance abilities and balance associated with rear-wheel drive.
Yeah, all.
Except:

and:
and some AWD just for fun:
I could post more. But I'm sure you probably just meant to say NASCAR racecars. I used to have a FWD track car and had several expensive RWD cars holding me up in the corners.
Rear-wheel-drive automobiles have been called safer vehicles due to their overall balance and drivability. This drivetrain allows the driver to feel like he has a large amount of control over the vehicle.
Hearsay unless you can provide evidence.
Camaros have been called mulletmobiles can will cause the owner to grow a mullet against his will.
See, I can play this game too.
Not everybody lives in a big city with paved roads with drainage and potholes being the main concern of what your ride needs to handle, Truck people live in the rural world. Try to talk city slicker **** to a cowboy and your gonna get the horns. Try to talk a farmer out of his capable work truck for a FWD car, and he will plow you into the ground. Try to talk a blue collar laborer to give up his truck with a live axle and a hauling load weight of a thousand lbs or more, and he will cover you with earth.
And I'm pretty sure most of those people you described would buy an Explorer for their wifes/girlfriends and drive a proper pickup truck themselves. I've never seen the Explorer as all that "manly" of a truck. And really, if you are concerned with image with what you drive.......
True, not everyone lives in the city. But most people do. I'd imagine that if not a single "rural" person bought a 2011 Explorer, they'd still be able to keep the lights on at the factory.
Front-wheel drive vehicles sometimes have a problem with torque steer. When the vehicle is accelerating at a certain speed, the steering can effected. This occurs because the engine is connected to the steering column. Rear-wheel drive vehicles do not have this same issue, due to the motor being located in a different place in the vehicle.
Wrong. Way wrong. Torque steer only happens when you accelerate REALLY hard. Most of the time, driving a FWD you'll never experience torque steer. And it's not caused because the engine is connected to the steering column (really? I can't believe I just read that.... total facepalm). Torque steer is caused from the unequal axle lengths due to the differential usually being off center in the front. And if a RWD with enough power accelerates fast enough, you'll also be faced with steering issues.