Tilting car

A tilting car is a type of automobile that has the ability to change the angle between the road and the bottom of the passenger cabin in a way that allows it to avoid rolling over while the vehicle is driving through a curve.

[3] Tilting is critically important for narrow-track vehicles because unlike wider vehicles, the acceleration required to make a non-tilting narrow vehicle skid during a curve is less than that required to make it roll over; tilting allows narrow-track vehicles to "lean into the curve".

[3] Tilting cars may have three or four wheels.

[3] Several prototypes tilting cars have been built since 1950.

[3] Some include: The Mercedes-Benz S-Class (C217) was a production car that could tilt up to 2.5 degrees, detecting curves with a camera and acceleration sensor.

The Nissan Land Glider , a concept car that could tilt up to 17 degrees on a turn [ 1 ]
The Toyota i-Road , which used an automatic tilting system called "Active Lean" [ 2 ]