Motor1.com on MSN
How McLaren's F1 team accidentally helped invent torque vectoring
McLaren’s 'Fiddle Brake' pedal let its drivers brake a single rear wheel to rotate the car into corners. Now it's used ...
Morning Overview on MSN
McLaren F1 stumbled into torque vectoring, and changed driving
McLaren did not set out to reinvent how road cars corner, yet its obsession with shaving tenths off a lap in Formula 1 quietly birthed a new way to think about traction and stability. What began as a ...
Torque vectoring is a system that allows cars to control how certain wheels get power. It’s designed to improve handling, stability, and performance and it’s a feature that is becoming more and more ...
I do a lot of new car testing at the racetrack, and the more at-the-limit testing I do, the more I’ve come to realize that “Off” rarely means 100 percent off when it comes to electronic stability ...
The active torque vectoring transmission of Visio.M advances the recuperation level, it also improves road handling dynamics, driving pleasure and safety. Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not ...
The 4WD technologies market in Europe is in the midst of significant change according to research firm Frost & Sullivan. There are increasing challenges in consumer demands leading to the development ...
Torque vectoring is an electronically controlled system that improves vehicle traction, cornering capabilities, and overall stability by allotting specific power delivery to individual wheels. It is ...
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