Rambo5.0h
Active Member
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Last night around 10 PM, I had the most intense driving experience of my life—and I felt it was worth sharing here.
I was out on a quiet road with my dad in the passenger seat. We had just installed a device in the car (Bouncie) that tracks speed, braking, and acceleration. My dad wanted to test what would qualify as “hard acceleration,” so I planned to launch from a red light.
Out of nowhere, a 2017 Mustang V6 pulled up in the lane next to me. Clearly wanted to run.
I was in Drag Strip mode, and I made the mistake of turning traction control off.
Light turns green—we both launch. I immediately pulled ahead, but around 4 seconds in, I hit 7,400 RPM, pedal still buried.
Then, it happened.
The rear of the car kicked out to the right, and the front swung left—straight toward the V6’s lane.
It felt like someone had lifted the car and rotated it sideways. The tires were screaming, and in that instant, my eyes widened. I felt a level of fear and dread I hadn’t felt in years. It genuinely felt like all control I had as the driver was ripped away in a heartbeat.
I knew if I reacted wrong—stayed in it, yanked the wheel, overcorrected—it would end in a spin, possibly a crash.
So I did the only thing I could think of: I tapped the brakes. Quick and controlled.
Snap.
The car jolted back straight. Traction returned. I regained full control.
No curb. No impact. No damage. Just silence.
Looking back, it’s a good thing he wasn’t a GT. If that had been a neck-and-neck run with another V8, I likely would’ve slid right into him—pushed him over the curb, and possibly into oncoming traffic.
That could’ve meant serious injury… or worse. And for me? Possibly a manslaughter charge.
I’ve always known the S650 has power and attitude—but last night, I learned respect. This car is no joke, and when you disable safety systems without the experience to back it up, things can go south fast.
Just remember, guys—your life can change just like that.
One second of overconfidence. One mistake. That’s all it takes.
Drive safe. Respect the machine. Always.
I was out on a quiet road with my dad in the passenger seat. We had just installed a device in the car (Bouncie) that tracks speed, braking, and acceleration. My dad wanted to test what would qualify as “hard acceleration,” so I planned to launch from a red light.
Out of nowhere, a 2017 Mustang V6 pulled up in the lane next to me. Clearly wanted to run.
I was in Drag Strip mode, and I made the mistake of turning traction control off.
Light turns green—we both launch. I immediately pulled ahead, but around 4 seconds in, I hit 7,400 RPM, pedal still buried.
Then, it happened.
The rear of the car kicked out to the right, and the front swung left—straight toward the V6’s lane.
It felt like someone had lifted the car and rotated it sideways. The tires were screaming, and in that instant, my eyes widened. I felt a level of fear and dread I hadn’t felt in years. It genuinely felt like all control I had as the driver was ripped away in a heartbeat.
I knew if I reacted wrong—stayed in it, yanked the wheel, overcorrected—it would end in a spin, possibly a crash.
So I did the only thing I could think of: I tapped the brakes. Quick and controlled.
Snap.
The car jolted back straight. Traction returned. I regained full control.
No curb. No impact. No damage. Just silence.
Looking back, it’s a good thing he wasn’t a GT. If that had been a neck-and-neck run with another V8, I likely would’ve slid right into him—pushed him over the curb, and possibly into oncoming traffic.
That could’ve meant serious injury… or worse. And for me? Possibly a manslaughter charge.
I’ve always known the S650 has power and attitude—but last night, I learned respect. This car is no joke, and when you disable safety systems without the experience to back it up, things can go south fast.
Just remember, guys—your life can change just like that.
One second of overconfidence. One mistake. That’s all it takes.
Drive safe. Respect the machine. Always.
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