04-12-2009, 03:23 PM
The only way to get the max build on a car is to check after every single upgrade. This is tedious and honestly hardly worth the effort except for IDE cars where every HP and handling point counts.
That being said, I've read some people say you have to dyno after every part, this is of course ridiculous. You can do the math, it's just tiring and takes time.
For handling it's obvious, it is exactly the same as doing PF, put on a part, go back to your garage, check the number, rinse and repeat till you figure out which part gives you the most.
Power is the same but there is math involved. Since the garage page gives you the percentage of HP that your car is making right now of the max possible you just need a simple equation to figure out which part is the best.
Divide the current HP by the percentage and multiply by 100.
So if your car is currently making 900HP and that is 90% of the max, divide 900 by 90 and multiply the result by 100.
900/90 = 10
10 x 100 = 1000
Max HP is 1000HP.
Obviously very dumbed down numbers but the result is the same. This DOES work every time, it's just very very tedious, especially for the ones with a lot of parts....
That being said, I've read some people say you have to dyno after every part, this is of course ridiculous. You can do the math, it's just tiring and takes time.
For handling it's obvious, it is exactly the same as doing PF, put on a part, go back to your garage, check the number, rinse and repeat till you figure out which part gives you the most.
Power is the same but there is math involved. Since the garage page gives you the percentage of HP that your car is making right now of the max possible you just need a simple equation to figure out which part is the best.
Divide the current HP by the percentage and multiply by 100.
So if your car is currently making 900HP and that is 90% of the max, divide 900 by 90 and multiply the result by 100.
900/90 = 10
10 x 100 = 1000
Max HP is 1000HP.
Obviously very dumbed down numbers but the result is the same. This DOES work every time, it's just very very tedious, especially for the ones with a lot of parts....