Edit: Saw this after posting.

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gavsdavs wrote:So if there isn't a formal

(i.e wikipedia definition) for FFR, then FMR

- is really just front engined with the engine further back for cars which are sold with less cabin space and better weight distribution.


Not sure how

"formal" wikipedia is, but it describes everything Marf has been saying.

Not sure why you couldn't look it up yourself, but here's a post all about it.

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gavsdavs wrote:As you are so keen to use

"front mid" as opposed to simply

"front" engined

- would you be so kind as to find the link on wikipedia for the

"front front engined" layout

?

It just sounds like a

'how far forward is the engine' and doesn't

(to me) sounds mid engined.

I'm not saying it's not an

'industry accepted phrase'

- i'm just saying it sounds like a rather forced distinction of

'front engined'.


Actually, by your logic you should be calling an MR2 a rear-engined car

(like a beetle or 911) simply because the engine is behind the driver, ignoring what the front and rear are actually referring to

- and that's the axles!

Place the engine in front of the front axel makes a car an FF, FR or F4 layout.

Place the engine between the axels gives MF, MR or M4 layouts

(often prefixed with an F or R to specify which axel the engine is closer to).

Place the engine behind the rear axel gives RR or R4.

And just to show Marf is speaking entirely correctly, here's the wikipedia page on the MF

(FMF) layout:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mid-engine ... ive_layout

In automotive design, a MF, or Mid-engine, Front-wheel-drive layout is one in which the front road wheels are driven by an internal-combustion engine placed just behind them, in front of the passenger compartment.

In contrast to the Front-engine, front-wheel-drive layout

(FF), the center of mass of the engine is behind the front axle.

This layout is typically chosen for its better weight distribution

(the heaviest component is near the center of the car, lowering its moment of inertia).


In fact, Wikipedia lists the S2000 as an example of the FMR layout:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mid-engine ... heel_drive

However it does, rightly or wrongly, state this:

These cars are RWD cars with engine placed between driver and front axle.

However, due to the difference being fairly minor, these cars are referred to as FR cars instead.


Meanwhile you asked for a wikipedia page on the FF layout.

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here you go:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FF_layout

And, more interestingly, there's a clear distinction raised between FF and MF on the mid-engined page linked bove:

MF layout

Front Mid-engine

/ Front-wheel drive

These cars are

"mid-ship engined" vehicles, but they use front-wheel drive, with the engine in front of the driver.

Please note that this layout should not be confused the FF layout- the MF layout has the engine's center of mass behind the front axle rather than in front of it as with FF.

In most examples, the engine is longitudinally mounted rather than the transversely as is common with FF cars.

