Nissan BladeGlider Concept



The BladeGlider features a radical chassis layout that incorporates an extra-narrow front track and a super-wide rear track to accomplish impressive aerodynamic performance. The tiny frontal area reduces drag, while a complex system of underbody diffusers manages to add just enough downforce to keep the car on the road. For those wondering how the BladeGlider changes direction with those skinny, close-quartered front wheels, which carry just 30 percent of the car’s weight.



The BladeGlider wears as normal a shape as we imagine possible given the restrictive chassis layout. Instead of looking like a four-wheeled colonoscope, it essentially is a three-dimensional wedge, its glider-inspired shape triangular in both cross-section and plan.


The BladeGlider features near-real-world practicality thanks to a pair of passenger seats mounted behind the centralized pilot’s chair. The interior is especially neat, and is accessible via a set of upward-swinging semi-butterfly doors. Facing the driver is an aircraft-style control yoke/steering wheel and futuristic-looking blue-tinted displays. The rear seats appear to be embedded into the BladeGlider’s carbon-fiber chassis tub, à la LaFerrari’s.


The independently powered rear wheels allow for torque-vectoring capabilities, as well as improved vehicle packaging. Our guess is that if this car ever were to reach production, the in-wheel motors might be among the first things to be tossed. Regardless, the electric motors are fed by a lithium-ion battery pack that Nissan describes as being similar in design to the unit in the production Leaf.