Self-Driven Rear Wheels Have Created The First AWD Civic Type R

A clever new design of wheel has been bolted to a Civic Type R test mule, boosting traction and handling with an extra 140bhp and torque vectoring
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The Honda Civic Type R is an awesome car and it doesn’t exactly lack pace, but here’s an idea: what if you could instantly add 140bhp and send that to the rear wheels?

That’s the idea behind a clever new ‘Ring-Drive’ electrically self-driven wheel from a company called Orbis. The prototype has been mounted to a Civic Type R, and while neither the video nor the company’s website explain exactly where the power comes from, the gist is an instantly-accessible boost worth 70bhp per wheel.

Self-Driven Rear Wheels Have Created The First AWD Civic Type R

Orbis says the wheels are no heavier than a standard items, using a small motor to directly drive the rim of the wheel in tandem with a bespoke two-speed gearbox, magnifying the effective torque delivery. Clever stuff, theoretically with no unsprung weight penalty, although batteries are still the great unknown. Presumably a 48-volt electrical system with mild hybrid-style batteries would be useful for this kind of thing.

Traction is massively improved, says Orbis, with the 0-60mph sprint laid down a whole second faster than in the standard Type R. Leaning on the rear wheels in everyday driving takes load off the engine and improves fuel economy, too. They also automatically torque-vector, too, to eliminate wheelspin and fire you out of low-speed corners like you’ve been shot out of a cannon.

The concept is demonstrated on this hubless electric motorbike
The concept is demonstrated on this hubless electric motorbike

Another benefit is a rim-mounted brake disc, giving ‘at least 50 per cent more swept area’, with a 20-30 per cent reduction in heat. That means reduced brake fade and a larger disc diameter for more power with a smaller, lighter caliper.

The one downside we can see (apart from the power source question) is that the prototype Ring-Drive system is a bit ugly. Orbis says it can cover it with a flat panel that customers can design any way they like, but we’re reserving judgement on that one.

Hat tip to RedTegB20

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Comments

Duggan (koalafan) (koalafan7) (Esprit Team) (Z32 Group) (Lot

It looks like a inside out wheel at first, also I would love to see conversions like this so we could have an AWD mx-6 for example, just maybe s less obvious rear wheel, but then again some cars should stay FWD

04/25/2018 - 12:11 |
4 | 0
Anonymous

Ugly, stupid, unreliable. Imagine driving this outside of your extra clean garage, let’s say, on gravel… One rock..

04/25/2018 - 12:32 |
2 | 4
Anonymous

Must be hell to clean

04/25/2018 - 12:59 |
0 | 0
BoostAddict 1

Just stick a Turbofan on it if you think it’s ugly. Then your brakes will never fade.

04/25/2018 - 13:17 |
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Anonymous

Speed racers predicted this

04/25/2018 - 13:28 |
38 | 0
Anonymous

I was wondering if those motors can be used in place of an engine on a 90’ model civic? They only had 110 hp

04/25/2018 - 14:09 |
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Anonymous

I was there at SAE this year, but sad I missed this!

04/25/2018 - 14:36 |
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Richard the edition 100

doesnt the civic already have systém that make it an awd like car

04/25/2018 - 15:33 |
0 | 0

No, that’s to eliminate torque steer

04/25/2018 - 20:30 |
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Cyrus Biarash

Honestly this is kinda cool

04/25/2018 - 17:35 |
0 | 0
TheHoosier

Waiting for Engineering Explained to help us out with how it works

04/25/2018 - 18:57 |
4 | 0

YES! I am intrigued by this system and want to know all about it! Mostly I’m confused by which parts rotate and which don’t, haha

04/25/2018 - 22:10 |
0 | 0