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I've added a note that theengine's center of gravity is moved behind the front axle. The wording before didn't qualify which center was being moved, and it was fairly easy to erroneously assume that the car's center of gravity was moved to behind the front axle; this would imply that the car's center of gravity was previously above or in front of the front axle.
Front-Mid engine placement is really nothing recent. It has appeared on classics such asShelby Cobra andFerrari 250 GTO. Fellow Wiki editors with more knowledge on FM should probably expand this concept into a stand-alone section. --911fan 02:52, Nov. 30 2005 (Pacific)
As a redirect fromSysteme Panhard, this page could help readers by indicating the origin of this "FR," "FM," etc. nomenclature. Is this standardized usage among Automotive Engineers? Automobile Historians note the difference between "carriage style" and "Panhard style" (See Flink'sThe Automobile Age for instance) automobile design. If "FR," "FM," etc. is engineering jargon, shouldn't this page should be clear about it? --RedJ 1701:53, 22 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
This article mentions rear transaxle Volvos, something I do not believe exists. I suggest removing this unless anyone knows of an example.Daniel J. Leivick
"GM phased out its FR luxury cars after the 1996 model year, and its F-car (Chevrolet Camaro/Pontiac Firebird) in 2002. GM reintroduced North American FR luxury cars with the 2003 Cadillac CTS"
I believe this statement to be incorrect. The Cadillac Catera (the CTS predecessor) was a FR luxury car in production from 1997-2001.65.42.26.190 (talk)19:41, 2 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]
A lot of engine room images show that the center mass of the drive train is behind of front strut tower, and later the Gen I 3.6 engine or the Gen II or STS moves the drive train forward.—Precedingunsigned comment added by60.250.42.178 (talk)07:00, 13 January 2010 (UTC)[reply]
The article mentions that FR is seen as best for luxury but doesn't mention sports cars. Though many sports cars are mid engined now, Front engined sports cars are usually rwd because you can lay down more power (Because you don't have tourque steer.(Morcus (talk)17:16, 3 August 2009 (UTC))[reply]
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Please forgive my writing style.
Bullet point (bullet point 2) in question:
"FMR should also not be confused with a "front midships" location of the engine, referring to the engine being located fully behind the front axle centerline, in which case a car meeting the above FMR center of mass definition could be classified as a FR layout instead. The V35 Nissan Skyline / Infiniti G35 / Nissan 350Z are FM cars."
^1. "be classified as a FR layout instead."
Should this read as - be classified as aFM layout instead.- As the line reads 'instead' , but it is referring originally to FR. And then the next sentence appears to give SAID examples of FM cars? , and you'll also note, "FR" simply links back to the same article page, but I believe it should be linking to the page for FM layout cars (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mid-engine_design) ?
2. Also, you'll see the abbreviation "FM" is used, but never was the abbreviation defined previously, and thus makes a writing error.
3. The paragraph/sentence, is just quite ambiguous in general, e.g -"in which case a car meeting theabove FMR center of mass definition" - 'above' - is 'above' referring to the first bullet point of the characteristics, or referring to a previous section of text within that same bullet point?
4. The heading "characteristics" is almost done as if it is describing "characteristics" of the article in question (the article being Front-engine, rear-wheel-drive layout (FR)), yet it is actually only characteristics pertaining to FMR cars, which are a type of FR car. This can be fixed, by merely actually writing some details about FR cars, so that it is more clear that FMR cars are a type of FR cars, and that 'FMR cars' has been nested within this FR cars article.
5. If you go tohttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mid-engine_design, you'll notice that FMR is given as an example of a TYPE of Mid engine car, yet the first words for this bullet point are "FMR should alsonot be confused with a "front midships" location of the engine" - So the article for mid engine, has contradictory information to the information of FMR found within the FR article. I strongly believe that FMR cars are a sub category of FR cars, and the mid engine article has got this contradictory information wrong, and thus, this particular edit needs to be relayed to thehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mid-engine_design talk page.
The structure and meta of the articles pertaining to two wheel, engine positioning systems is truly a mess, and it shouldn't be too difficult as it is a fairly easy self contained topic that consists of about 3 umbrellas, with a couple of sub categories within each umbrella. I think the whole 'wheel:engine positioning' 'domain/topic' of wikipedia needs a serious overhaul.— Precedingunsigned comment added byBattleCrap (talk •contribs)12:39, 12 March 2020 (UTC)[reply]
But anyway... here is my proposed edit for the second bullet point, I think it is much more clear and less ambiguous:
"FMR should also not be confused with a "front midships (FM) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mid-engine_design)" location of the engine, referring to the engine being located fully behind the front axle centerline (as oppose to only its centre of mass behind the front axle). The V35 Nissan Skyline / Infiniti G35 / Nissan 350Z are examples of FM cars."— Precedingunsigned comment added byBattleCrap (talk •contribs)12:34, 12 March 2020 (UTC)[reply]
Fully agree that bullet point is confusing as crap. Note however theNissan FM platform page simply says the "midship" design puts the center of gravity behind the axle, not that the entire engine is behind the axle (and it surely is not). My guess is "midship" is really just a nissan marketing term for FMR.Gjxj (talk)17:34, 8 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I linked this page back to the main powertrain layout page, hope everyone is happy with that.Vola31 (talk)18:37, 23 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]