Unusual car design criteria?
Discussion
IIRC Black cabs have to have a turning circle less then 25ft. This was to allow them to make a tight turn outside the Savoy.
The old black cabs had one wheel turn in a good bit more then the other to enable this and the new Mercedes Vito based black cabs are fitted with rear wheel steering to achieve it.
The old black cabs had one wheel turn in a good bit more then the other to enable this and the new Mercedes Vito based black cabs are fitted with rear wheel steering to achieve it.
Edited by rpguk on Tuesday 21st August 13:34
IIRC Black cabs have to have a turning circle less then 25ft. This was to allow them to make a tight turn outside the Savoy.
The old black cabs had one wheel turn in a good bit more then the other to enable this and the new Mercedes Vito based black cabs are fitted with rear wheel steering to achieve it.
The old black cabs had one wheel turn in a good bit more then the other to enable this and the new Mercedes Vito based black cabs are fitted with rear wheel steering to achieve it.
Rawwr said:
IIRC Black cabs have to have a turning circle less then 25ft. This was to allow them to make a tight turn outside the Savoy.
The old black cabs had one wheel turn in a good bit more then the other to enable this and the new Mercedes Vito based black cabs are fitted with rear wheel steering to achieve it.
Hmm where did you read that?The old black cabs had one wheel turn in a good bit more then the other to enable this and the new Mercedes Vito based black cabs are fitted with rear wheel steering to achieve it.
I think the steering on a london cab is just the usual results of the Ackermann Angle and a good lock
Rawwr said:
IIRC Black cabs have to have a turning circle less then 25ft. This was to allow them to make a tight turn outside the Savoy.
The old black cabs had one wheel turn in a good bit more then the other to enable this and the new Mercedes Vito based black cabs are fitted with rear wheel steering to achieve it.
Grr :shakefist: bloody site kept giving me errorsThe old black cabs had one wheel turn in a good bit more then the other to enable this and the new Mercedes Vito based black cabs are fitted with rear wheel steering to achieve it.
There were the famous Rolls-Royce tests- the one about the dashboard clock being the loudest thing in the car at 60 mph is the best known, but there were (are?) others, IIRC including the engine being able to run at full speed for 48 hours with no detectable wear to any part and the steering still being true after being repeatedly driven into a curb.
Not sure if this counts as a car design specification, but the Crosley CoBra engine used in Crosley's 1940s American microcars had been designed as an auxiliary power unit for B-17 bombers, so was absurdly light. The block was made of sheet metal and weighed less than 7 kg.
Staying with American microcars, the 1950 Kaiser-Fraser Henry J was built using a US Government loan which required the car to be sold for a very low retail price- so to keep the price down, it had no boot lid! The boot could only be accessed by folding down the back seat.
And of course, the VW Type 1's requirement to cruise at 65 mph was extremely unusual for economy cars at the time.
Not sure if this counts as a car design specification, but the Crosley CoBra engine used in Crosley's 1940s American microcars had been designed as an auxiliary power unit for B-17 bombers, so was absurdly light. The block was made of sheet metal and weighed less than 7 kg.
Staying with American microcars, the 1950 Kaiser-Fraser Henry J was built using a US Government loan which required the car to be sold for a very low retail price- so to keep the price down, it had no boot lid! The boot could only be accessed by folding down the back seat.
And of course, the VW Type 1's requirement to cruise at 65 mph was extremely unusual for economy cars at the time.
The 70s Lancia Beta was designed to turn into convenient rust-flakes and dust within a year, hence saving on expensive MOT-work later on.
Slightly off-thread, but do I remember the Renault 16 having a different wheelbase on each side of the car? If so, why? And did they change it round for left-hand-drive and RHD cars?
Slightly off-thread, but do I remember the Renault 16 having a different wheelbase on each side of the car? If so, why? And did they change it round for left-hand-drive and RHD cars?
The Don of Croy said:
The W124 Mercs had asymmetric door mirrors - a feature not repeated. Must have been a good theory behind it...also the monowiper on the same model.
Most LHD VW's have this. However they don't bother making a special smaller left-side mirror for the RHD markets, so in the UK both mirrors are the same size.Slightly off-thread, but do I remember the Renault 16 having a different wheelbase on each side of the car? If so, why? And did they change it round for left-hand-drive and RHD cars?
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I think it was for cheapness. It meant that the rear suspension torsion bars can be staggered across the width of the car with out any fancy engineering.
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