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Ashikabi: while many may see problems with shifted grip balance only on track and almost none on good tarmac in warm countries, many may see them in daily driving too .. if they live in countries with cold winter weather, when grip is very limited on snow/ice. On winter track .. or unplown/frozen public roads too, i prefer rather controling oversteer then understeer (though this is possible too, with mass transfer via brakes and accelerator liftoff and of course with lower entry speed), if car tends to push front out too much. I guess, it may be seen during heavy rain, near to aquaplaning speeds, aswell. And enthusiastic "canyon runs" are not that far from mild track use. Yes, grip can be reduced on back and added in front with some suspension upgrades/tuning .. but why introduce something that needs to be fixed with more investments in first place? Hence i won't agree that it won't matter and most drivers won't feel difference if daily driving only. Some won't .. but if they won't use this car as it was designed for, for bringing driving fun in curvy roads, it's just wasted potential of it.
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