Currently reading: Nissan cool on production BladeGlider sports car

Carbonfibre, three-seater, sub-370Z electric sports car isn't high on Nissan's list of priorities, confirms new chief planning officer Philippe Klein

Nissan’s radical electric BladeGlider is still classed as “an exploratory concept” 18 months after being revealed at the 2013 Tokyo motor show, with the project described as being “not among the immediate priorities” of the firm by its new chief planning officer Philippe Klein.

Described as an “anti-establishment three-seat electric sports car” and championed on its reveal by then Nissan boss Andy Palmer, who now runs Aston Martin, BladeGlider was expected to go on sale by 2017 priced at around £30,000.

Production test mules, built around an Ariel Atom, were known to have been produced, while Deltawing race car designer Ben Bowlby involved with the project.

But Klein, who replaced Palmer last year, said: “It is still on the table, but at the end of the day it has to make sense to the company. We have the concept car, and it has the ability to surprise, but it is not big in our plans now. Before we jump in with a production car there is a path to take - and first we must see the opportunity is there.”

The BladeGlider concept was originally described as a blueprint for an anti-establishment small electric sports car based on the principles of the Deltawing race car.

Speaking to Autocar, Bowlby said the BladeGlider would become a "handling benchmark" for the automotive industry. "It's about efficiency, it's about pulling a lot of G, it's about an exciting and pleasurable ride and yet being very efficient while doing that," he said. "So extreme handling and extreme fun and a whole new experience, a totally different driving experience.”

Speaking at the 2013 Tokyo motor show, Palmer said: "When I was growing up the principle was that young people wanted a sports car and their parents hated the idea of them - the problem with all of today's sports cars is that they are actually owned by parents.

"We are exploring ways of getting back to a sports car that is affordable, challenging and appealing for young people."

Styling of the production car was expected to change from that of the concept, with the BladeGlider being described by design chief Shiro Nakamura as "an extreme interpretation" of how the car could look. Like the Deltawing race car, it had an extremely narrow front track, measuring just one metre, and a much wider rear track, which Nissan only described as "stable".

The deltoid body shape of the BladeGlider concept was shown wrapped in carbonfibre-reinforced plastic, with the interior seating three people: a centrally placed passenger and two passengers either side, as pioneered on the McLaren F1 road car.

The narrow front end aids aerodynamic efficiency, while the carbonfibre underbody creates downforce without the need for drag-enhancing wings. The car's weight distribution is 30/70 front to rear, thanks largely to the low and rearward positioning of the lithium ion batteries and low weight of the in-wheel electric motors.

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"I've driven the prototype, and it is unlike anything I have sampled before," said Palmer. "This is the car that takes advantage of all the packaging benefits of an electric powertrain. All that weight and the set-up of the front tracks mean that the car is incredibly pointy, but the rear track and downforce mean that you can catch the oversteer with amazing ease."

Read more: Dramatic Nissan BladeGlider concept returns (August 2016)

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TBC 16 March 2015

Engine location

When referring to three-wheelers, or in the case of narrow track vehicles such as the BladeGlider, the most important design element, is to place the engine as close the two (widest track) wheels, and ensure that those wheels are powered by said engine. Additionally, ensure the driven wheels are as far apart as the design allows (track), and the centre of gravity is as low as possible. A Reliant Robin, with the engine located behind the rear axle would have handled as well as any normal passenger car of its day.
Turismo 8 November 2013

People are looking at it the

People are looking at it the wrong way in terms of safety. it's better to see it like a caterham, but with a much more stable track rear end, and wider. And it's much safer than a bike.
Frightmare Bob 8 November 2013

Given the width of the nose,

Given the width of the nose, together with the lack of any visible steering or suspension gear on either side, implying that they must be inboard, you need to be rather dim to think it is a three-wheeler.