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A de Dion tube is an automobile suspension technology. It is a sophisticated form of non-independent suspension and is a considerable improvement over the alternative swing axle and Hotchkiss drive types. A de Dion suspension uses universal joints at both the wheel hubs and differential, and uses a solid tubular beam to hold the opposite wheels in parallel. Unlike an anti-roll bar, a de Dion tube is not directly connected to the chassis nor is it intended to flex. In suspension geometry it is close to the trailing beam suspension seen on many front wheel drive cars, but without the torsional flexibility of that suspension.
[edit] HistoryThe de Dion tube was named after Comte Jules-Albert de Dion, founder of French automobile manufacturer De Dion-Bouton. The tube, however, was invented around 1894 by co-founder Charles Trépardoux for use on the company's steam tricycles.[1] [edit] Advantages and disadvantagesThe benefits of a de Dion suspension include: [2]
There are costs, however:
[edit] Use in production cars de Dion tube used in a 1998 Ford Ranger EV [edit] Older carsIn addition the original Mazda Cosmo, Alfa Romeo Alfetta, GTV6, Giulietta, Alfa 6, 90, 75/Milano, Lancia Aurelia (fourth series onwards), first and second generation Prince Gloria, Lancia Flaminia, Volvo 300-series, Rover P6 and Dodge Caravan & Grand Caravan (all wheel drive version from 1991-2004) are examples of production vehicles using this suspension. Some of the largest Opels, such as the Opel Diplomat "B" of 1969, also used this suspension. All Aston Martins from 1967 to 1989. [edit] Recent carsThe Smart Fortwo and Smart Roadster micro-compact cars produced by DaimlerChrysler, Mitsubishi i kei car produced by Mitsubishi Motors and the Caterham 7 (a development of the Lotus Seven after Lotus sold the design rights to Caterham Cars), are the only cars currently in production that utilize this arrangement, as well as the products of some kit car companies. A recent vehicle to use this suspension coupled with leaf springs was the Ford Ranger EV. [edit] References
[edit] Sources
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