here
Disagreement over the definition of mid-engined...one of my pet peeves...
[Edited on 16/11/05 by Alan B]
theres no need to gang up on me
There's every need.....
All in good spirits of course.....
I would think that if the engine is in front of the front axle, it would be front engine. Behind the rear axle, rear engine. between the axles, mid
engine. Plain and simple.
"Mid means behind the driver but between the axles..." - too specific, but the accepted meaning.
at least, on this side of the pond.
dave
Dave I agree that there is some logic in your suggestion, however you then end up with the ridiculous "front-mid" terminology to cover
locosts...
To me in front of the driver is always front engined...either side of the axle.
All semantics really I guess and hardly worth argueing about....although I still do/will...
Just chucked my 2d worth in....
Hopefully upset everyone.
Here - direct lift from the Aston Martin website
Extraordinary engine power is not the only reason for the superb performance of the V8 Vantage. Just as important is its lightweight, all-alloy
structure, which offers class-leading strength and rigidity. The front mid-engined layout & the dry sump lubrication system allows the engine to
sit low ; and rear-mid transmission help provide optimum front to rear weight distribution as well as a low centre of gravity. The result is
exceptional agility and inspired balance and handling.
[Edited on 16/11/05 by zilspeed]
I've seen the "front-mid" thing thing creeping in......all just words I guess, and who knows, maybe more descriptive and logical...
Still silly IMO...
Last words on the subject from me..
Possibly..
I'm with you Alan!
"Front-mid-engined" should not be confused with a "mid-engined" car which is defined as a car with the engine located between the
driver and the rear wheels. Period. Exclamation point.
I never heard the term "Front-mid-engined" until just recently, and it's fairly clear that it's mainly the product of marketing
people trying to gain an advantage while actually muddying the waters.
heres how I see it.
Front Engined (99% american/jap cars): engine on front wheels in front of driver
Mid Engine(MR2/ X19 /Fiero): engine between Front and rear axles behind driver
rear engine (VW bug, corvair): engine behind rear wheels and transmission
I've never heard a definition mention engine being parallel or perpendicular to the frame
Donut, Kreb and Jestre...
Two thumbs waaaaaaaaay up..
[Edited on 16/11/05 by Alan B]
quote:
Originally posted by Alan B
I've seen the "front-mid" thing thing creeping in......all just words I guess, and who knows, maybe more descriptive and logical...
Still silly IMO...
WARNING RANT
I think that it is auto journalist caught in mastibitorial word play that make them think that they have to recraft the wheel everytime they hammer
some article out. Then they have to stroke the MANUFACTURER for giving them the chance to drive the Austin Malaires QuatroInsignifico GT Sports
Coup-eh. They really pile it on and say the car is cheap at Quarter Million,as if their driving it elevates them to legendary staus and somehow makes
their gas smell minty fresh.
Ever wonder why they spend 65% of their time reviewing cars that 95% of their readers will probably never see outside the mag covers.
I often wonder what drivel they would whip up to describe this car....
http://dpcars.aprsworld.com/dp1bld/dp1144.jpg
Engineers Know what they built and the compromises they were forced to make...Drivers can tell you how it handles and drives or doesn't handle
and shouldnt be driven...leave it to marketing to tell you it handles on rails and engineering was priority one ( and marketing half written the
atricle for the auto journalist sells the auto journalist a ride for the price of a good review)
[Edited on 17/11/05 by dl_peabody]
Rolls-Royce Phantom has the engine behind the front axle, hardly a midengined car is it ?
Cheers.
Really, I don't care what terminology is used!
But generally I call a car with the engine in front of me "front engined", and with the engine behind it's "rear engined".
"mid-engined" I regard as a woolly description of an engine that's squashed in just behind the driver.
Just my 2p's worth...
David
(putting away his wooden spoon)
It's just another iteration of how media keeps reinventing phrases. Remember when the word "turbo" was all over the place, on
everything from computers to toilet cleaner?
Then they latched onto "system." Now everything is a "system", be it house cleaner or engine oil.
My recent favorite I view with contempt is the bastardly use of the phrase "up to..."
"This system is *guaranteed* to make you up to $50,000." They know full well people latch on to that number, though "up to" means
they also guarantee zero improvement too. Weesels.
The misuse of "mid-engine" is just more of the same, media/advertising trying to rewrite a commonly understood term to make their product
look better.
quote:
Originally posted by jestre
I've never heard a definition mention engine being parallel or perpendicular to the frame
Transverse, yes, in-line, no. In-line means the cylinders are in line, in the block. A V6 is not in-line, yet can be mounted north-south or transverse.