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The digital chassis revolution: How IM presented by MG Motor’s silicon brain rewrites driving physics


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Most cars still operate like they’re stuck in the mechanical age – pedal pushes brakes, steering wheel turns front wheels, end of story.

IM presented by MG Motor is a new-to-Australia premium auto brand that boasts a cutting-edge digital chassis, tossing that notion out the window in favour of something that sounds like science fiction but drives like automotive reality.

Think of it as your car developing a functioning nervous system, one that can sense and correct trouble before your reflexes even register there’s a problem.

The IM5 sedan and IM6 SUV don’t just bolt computers onto conventional chassis components – they reimagine the entire relationship between hardware and software.

With over 3000 semiconductors coordinating everything from suspension response to brake pressure, these vehicles represent the first genuine step toward cars that think faster than their drivers.

It’s not about replacing human judgment; it’s about giving that judgment superhuman reflexes and near-psychic anticipation of what’s coming next.

What Is a digital chassis?

Traditional chassis engineering follows a straightforward philosophy: mechanical components respond to driver inputs through hydraulic, pneumatic, or electronic systems that operate independently. Your brakes do the braking, your suspension handles bumps, your steering manages direction – each system in its own lane, so to speak.

IM’s digital chassis completely flips this approach. Instead of separate systems responding to individual commands, IM by MG Motor models use a centralised computing platform that orchestrates every dynamic component simultaneously.

Indeed, the IM5 sedan and IM6 SUV’s shared 800V electrical architecture doesn’t just power the car; it enables real-time interaction between suspension, steering, braking, and powertrain systems at speeds that render human reaction times obsolete.