What is Automobile Chassis ?

What is An Automobile Chassis?
What is Automobile Chassis ?


The word Chassis lies in the French language. Chassis is the main support structure of the vehicle, which is also known as ‘Frame’. It bears all the stresses on the vehicle in both static and dynamic conditions. 

The purpose of chassis is to connect all the four wheels with a structure which is rigid in bending and torsion. Every vehicle whether it is a two-wheeler or a car or a truck has a chassis frame. 

However, its form obviously varies with the vehicle type. Chassis consists of internal framework that supports the man-made object. It is the under part of the vehicle which consists of frame & running gear like engine, transmission system, suspension system etc. 


The automotive chassis is tasked with keeping all components together while driving and transferring vertical and lateral loads, caused by acceleration, on the chassis through suspension and the wheels. The key to good chassis design is that further mass is away from the neutral axis the more rigid it is.
In most passenger cars through the middle of the 20th century, a pressed steel frame- the vehicle’s chassis – formed the skeleton on which the engine, wheels, axle assemblies, transmission, steering mechanism, brakes and suspension members were mounted. 

The body was flexibly bolted to the chassis during a manufacturing process typically referred to as body-on-frame construction. This process is used today for heavy-duty vehicles, such as trucks, which benefit from having a strong central frame, subjected to the forces involved in such activities as carrying freight, including the absorption of the movements of the engine and axle that is allowed by the combination of body and frame.

In modern passenger-car designs, the chassis frame and the body are combined into a single structural element. In this arrangement, called unit-body (or unibody) construction, the steel body shell is reinforced with braces that make it rigid enough to resist the forces that are applied to it. 

Separate frames or partial “stub” frames have been used for some cars to achieve better noise-isolation characteristics. The heavier gauge steel present in modern components designs also tends to absorb energy during impacts and limit intrusion in accidents.

Components of Automobile Chassis:
·           Frame
·          Suspension Mechanism
·          Steering Mechanism
·          Radiator
·          Engine/Clutch/Gearbox
·          Propeller Shaft
·          Differential
·          Braking System
·          Battery
·          Silencer
 Fuel Tank

Functions of Automobile Chassis:

  1. Supports and bears the load of the vehicle body.
  2. Provide the space and mounting location for various aggregates of vehicle.
  3. Supports the weight of various systems of the vehicle such as engine,  transmission etc. 
  4. Supports a load of passengers as well as the luggage.
  5. Withstands the stresses arising due to bad road conditions. 
  6. Withstands stresses during braking and acceleration of the vehicle.
Manufacturers of Automobile Chassis:
   Here are some automotbile chassis manufacturers listed below:
  • Ford commercial vehicles
  • Isuzu commercial trucks
  • Ashok Leylands
  • TATA commercial vehicles
  • Bosch Chassis systems  
Read Also: Maserati MC 20 Detailed Specification

    Chassis Layout of Automobile

    Chassis Layout of Automobile

    The chassis frame is a basic framework of the automobile. This frame supports all the parts of the automobile attached to it. This frame is made of a material like drop-forged steel. All the parts of the automobile are attached to it only. All the systems related to automobile-like power plant, transmission, steering, suspension, braking system etc. are supported by chassis frame only.


    Chassis Layout

    Chassis Layout of Automobile


    Description of chassis layout as below:

    A) Chassis Frame – It supports the engine, wheels, steering, body, braking system, suspension assembly.

    B) Radiator – Radiators are used for cooling internal combustion engines. For that purpose, the radiator is placed at the very front of the engine of the automobile.

    C) Engine – It is the power source of the automobile, from which power is to be generated to drive the automobile.

    D) Clutch – A clutch is a mechanical device which engages & disengages power transmission especially from driving shaft to driven shaft.

    E) Gearbox – A gearbox is a system that uses integrated gears with a specific arrangement to transmit the power.

    F) Universal Joint – A universal joint is a joint or coupling connecting rigid rods whose axes inclined to each other.

    G) Propeller Shaft – Propeller shaft is a mechanical component used for transmitting torque & rotation, usually used to connect other components of a drive train that cannot be connected directly that need to allow for relative movement between them.

    H) Differential – A differential is a gear train with three shafts that has the property of the rotational speed of one shaft is the average of the speeds of others.

    Types of Chassis Layout
    According to the arrangement of engine & transmission the following types of layout are given as :

    1. Front Engine Front Wheel Drive
          In this layout, both the internal combustion engine and driven road wheels at the front of the vehicle.
                                                          
    2. Front Engine Rear Wheel Drive
         In this layout, internal combustion engine placed at front and driven road wheels located at the rear of the vehicle.
                                                        
    3. Mid Engine Rear Wheel Drive
         In this layout, the engine is between or behind the rear wheels & drives the front wheel via a driven shaft.
                                                     
    4. Rear Engine Rear Wheel Drive
        In this layout, both the engine and drive wheels located at the rear of the vehicle.
                    
    Chassis Layout of Automobile
                                        

    5. All Wheel Drive
    In this layout, a two-axled vehicle drive train capable of providing torque to all of its wheels simultaneously. It may be full-time or on-demand & its typically linked via a transfer case providing an additional output drive shaft and in many instances, additional gear ranges.
                        
    Chassis Layout of Automobile


    Don't Miss: 
                                                 

    1979-2004 Ford Mustang floor mats

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?


    Classification of  Automobile

      
    There are several types of automobile which are based on several criteria. A brief classification of   Automobile as follows:

    A) Based on Purpose:
     1. Passenger Vehicles – These vehicles carry passengers. For example, Buses, Passenger Trains Cars.

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?

     2. Goods or Cargo Vehicles – These vehicles carry different goods for transportation from one place to another place. For example, Goods lorry, Goods carrier.

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?


    B) Based on Fuel Source:
     1. Petrol Engine Vehicles – Vehicles which are powered by petrol engines. For example, Scooters, Motorcycles, Cars.

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?


     2. Diesel Engine Vehicles – Vehicles powered by diesel engines. For example, Trucks, Buses.

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?


     3. Gas Vehicles – Vehicles used the gas turbine as a power source. For example, Turbine powered cars.

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?


     4. Hybrid Vehicles – Vehicles that are used two or more distinct power sources. For example, Hybrid cars like Toyota Prius, Honda city hybrid, Hybrid buses.

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?


     5. Hybrid Electric Vehicles – Vehicles that uses both Internal Combustion engine as well as Electric power source to propel itself. For example, Jaguar C-X75.

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?


     6. Solar Vehicles – Vehicles that are powered by solar energy. For example, Solar-powered cars.

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?


     7. Electric Vehicles – Vehicles that are powered by an electrical energy source. For example, E-bikes, Electric buses.

     8. Hydrogen Vehicles – Vehicles that have hydrogen as the power source. For example, Honda FCX Clarity
    .
    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?


     9. Steam Engine Vehicles – Vehicles that move on a steam engine. For example, Steamboats, Steam locomotive, Steam Wagon.

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?



    C) Based on Capacity:
     1. Heavy Motor Vehicle – Large & bulky vehicles. For example, Large trucks, Buses.


     2. Light Motor Vehicle Small vehicles. For example, Cars, Jeeps.

     3. Medium Vehicle – Relatively medium-sized vehicles. For example, Mini buses, Small trucks.

    D) Based on type of  the Transmission:
     1. Conventional Manual Transmission Vehicles – Vehicles whose gear ratios have to be changed manually.

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?


     2. Semi-Automatic Transmission Vehicles – Vehicles having to transmit power by changing gears manually by using the clutch pedal.

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?


     3. Automatic Transmission Vehicles – Vehicles that are capable of changing gear ratios automatically as they move. For example, Automatic transmission cars.

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?


    E) Based on Side of the Drive:
     1. Left Hand Drive Vehicle – Vehicle in which steering wheel fitted left-hand side. For example, Vehicles in the USA, Russia.

     2. Right Hand Drive Vehicle - Vehicle in which steering wheel fitted right-hand side. For example, Vehicles in India.

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?

     
    F) Based on number of wheels:
     1. Two Wheeler – Vehicles having two wheels. For example, Scooters, Motorcycles.

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?


     2. Three-Wheeler – Vehicles having three wheels. For example, Tricycles, Tempo, Auto-Rickshaw.

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?

     3. Four Wheeler – Vehicles having four wheels. For example, Cars, Jeeps.

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?


     4. Six Wheeler – Vehicles having six wheels for heavy transportation. For example, Large Trucks, Large Buses.

    Classification of Automobile and How Automobiles are Classified?





    What is Automobile ?

    I hope everyone is familiar to the word i.e. "Automobile". In our daily routine life we use different automobile products but how many of we know the meaning of automobile. Here I try to clear the definition of automobile.
    Mainly the definition of automobile consist of three major points as below :
      1. Wheeled   
      2. Movements
      3. It's own motive power i.e. internal engine 
        So we can simply defined as, an automobile is wheeled vehicle using its own motive power so we can move it from one place to another place, it may be used to transport people, transport goods & many other items. For example,


        • One wheeler - Mono-cycle
        What is Automobile ?

        • Two wheeler - Motorcycle
        What is Automobile ?

        • Three wheeler- Auto Rickshaw

        What is Automobile ?


          • Four wheeler - Car  
          What is Automobile ?

          Buses & trucks are also part of automobile.

          But "Bicycle" & "Rickshaw" are not the part of an automobile. Because from the definition of an automobile,
          • It must have connections with the wheel
          • It must have movements
          • It must have own motive power 
          What is Automobile ?
          Rickshaw
          From the above, for "Bicycle" & "Rickshaw" the above 1 & 2 points are correct and true but the 3rd point not fulfilled by "Bicycle" & "Rickshaw" because it's run by the human force that's the point make difference & those are not the define as automobile.


          If you want to know more about automobile keep read my blogs...........

          Positive Trust Balance for Self Driving Car Deployment

          By Philip Koopman and Michael Wagner, Edge Case Research

          Self-driving cars promise improved road safety. But every publicized incident chips away at confidence in the industry’s ability to deliver on this promise, with zero-crash nirvana nowhere in sight. We need a way to balance long term promise vs. near term risk when deciding that this technology is ready for deployment. A “positive trust balance” approach provides a framework for making a responsible deployment decision by combining testing, engineering rigor, operational feedback, and transparent safety culture.


          MILES AND DISENGAGEMENTS AREN’T ENOUGH

          Too often, discussions about why the public should believe a particular self-driving car platform is well designed center around number of miles driven. Simply measuring the number of miles driven has a host of problems, such as distinguishing “easy” from “hard” miles and ensuring that miles driven are representative of real world operations. That aside, accumulating billions of road miles to demonstrate approximate parity to human drivers is an infeasible testing goal. Simulation helps, but still leaves unresolved questions about including enough edge cases that pose problems for deployment at scale.

          By the time a self-driving car design is ready to deploy, the rate of potentially dangerous disengagements and incidents seen in on-road testing should approach zero. But that isn’t enough to prove safety. For example, a hypothetical ten million on-road test miles with no substantive incidents would still be a hundred times too little to prove that a vehicle is as safe as a typical human driver. So getting to a point that dangerous events are too rare to measure is only a first step.

          In fact, competent human drivers are so good that there is no practical way to measure that a newly developed self-driving car has a suitably low fatality rate. This should not be news. We don’t fly new aircraft designs for billions of hours before deployment to measure the crash rate. Instead, we count on a combination of thorough testing, good engineering, and safety culture. Self-driving cars typically rely on machine learning to sense the world around them, so we will also need to add significant feedback from vehicles operating in the field to plug inevitable gaps in training data.


          POSITIVE TRUST BALANCE

          The self-driving car industry is invested in achieving a “positive risk balance” of being safer than a human driver. And years from now actuarial data will tell us if we succeeded. But there will be significant uncertainty about risk when it’s time to deploy. So we’ll need to trust development and deployment organizations to be doing the right things to minimize and manage that risk.

          To be sure, developers already do better than brute force mileage accumulation. Simulations backed up by comprehensive scenario catalogs ensure that common cases are covered. Human copilots and data triage pipelines flag questionable self-driving behavior, providing additional feedback. But those approaches have their limits.

          Rather than relying solely on testing, other industries use safety standards to ensure appropriate engineering rigor. While traditional safety standards were never intended to address self-driving aspects of these vehicles, new standards such as Underwriters Laboratories 4600 and ISO/PAS 21448 are emerging to set the bar on engineering rigor and best practices for self-driving car technology.

          The bad news is that nobody knows how to prove that machine learning based technology will actually be safe. Although we are developing best practices, when deploying a self-driving car we’ll only know whether it is apparently safe, and not whether it is actually as safe as a human driver. Going past that requires real world experience at scale.

          Deploying novel self-driving car technology without undue public risk will involve being able to explain why it is socially responsible to operate these systems in specific operational design domains. This requires addressing all of the following points:

          Is the technology as safe as we can measure? This doesn’t mean it will be perfect when deployed. Rather, at some point we will have reached the limits of viable simulation and testing.

          Has sufficient engineering rigor been applied? This doesn’t mean perfection. Nonetheless, some objective process such as establishing conformance to sufficiently rigorous engineering standards that go beyond testing is essential.

          Is a robust feedback mechanism used to learn from real world experience? There must be proactive, continual risk management over the life of each vehicle based on extensive field data collection and analysis.

          Is there a transparent safety culture? Transparency is required in evolving robust engineering standards, evaluating that best practices are followed, and ensuring that field feedback actually improves safety. A proactive, robust safety culture is essential. So is building trust with the public over time.

          Applying these principles will potentially change how we engineer, regulate, and litigate automotive safety. Nonetheless, the industry will be in a much better place when the next adverse news event occurs if their figurative public trust account has a positive balance.

          Philip Koopman is the CTO of Edge Case Research and an expert in autonomous vehicle safety. Including his role as a faculty member at Carnegie Mellon University, Koopman has been helping government, commercial and academic self-driving developers improve safety for over 20 years. He is a principal contributor to the Underwriters Laboratories 4600 safety standard.

          Michael Wagner is the CEO of Edge Case Research. He started working on autonomy at Carnegie Mellon over 20 years ago.


          (Original post here:  https://medium.com/@pr_97195/positive-trust-balance-for-self-driving-car-deployment-ff3f04a7ef93)