Floating Power

Floating Power was a technology developed in the 1920s by the United States automobile firm Chrysler.

It was a new means of attaching an engine to its chassis, with the intention of reducing vibration.

Four-cylinder engines of the day transmitted torque to the entire chassis, producing considerable vibration.

One mounting attachment was at the upper front of the engine, directly below the water pump.

The French firm Citroën leased the technology for its front-wheel drive car of the 1930s.