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Discussion Starter · #4 ·
we arent driving as fast as it may look in the photos, but i still got a ton of bad left over photos that isnt usable at all, but that is how it is. some will turn out better than others.
last time i took photo of moving was to some car events back in 2007 or something around that, so im a bit out of touch. but did i manage to get something usable.

figuring out a setting on the camera first is a good thing :)
slow shutter captures more motion in the photo and gives a sense of high speed, but makes it harder to get sharp photos.
fast shutter will look like less motion or look like the cars arent moving, but the photo gets sharp.
it's all about a good balance between those two.
 

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Nice pictures (y)
I am still trying to learn RC drifting myself, but between the hot summer weather and the parking lot surface not being ideal, progress has been slow for me lol...
I will have to post pictures of my car, an MST RMX 2.0 in my RC topic sometime. Also might get a Yokomo to have two different flavors of drift car. ;)
 

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Discussion Starter · #6 ·
before you buy another drifter i would say to see if you find drifting fun before you spend the money on another chassis :)
if you want to buy a Yokomo chassis i would suggest the YD-2S, because upgrades are easier to get for it than for the YD-2E. a few of the YD-2E upgrades are unicorn hard to find (like graphite rear shock tower).
 
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