Tilting car
A tilting car is a type of automobile that has the ability to change the angle between the road and the bottom of the passenger cabin in a way that allows it to avoid rolling over while the vehicle is driving through a curve. Tilting is critically important for narrow-track vehicles because unlike wider vehicles, the acceleration required to make a non-tilting narrow vehicle skid during a curve is less than that required to make it roll over; tilting allows narrow-track vehicles to "lean into the curve". Tilting cars may have three or four wheels.
Prototypes and examples
Several prototypes tilting cars have been built since 1950. Some include:- Ford Gyron
- Lean Machine
- F-300 Life-jet
- Carver One,
- CLEVER
- Lumeneo Smera
- Nissan Land Glider
- Tilter
- Toyota i-Road