Version: 2019.4
Continuous collision detection (CCD)
Physics Debug Visualization

Create a vehicle with Wheel Colliders

The Wheel ColliderAn invisible shape that is used to handle physical collisions for an object. A collider doesn’t need to be exactly the same shape as the object’s mesh - a rough approximation is often more efficient and indistinguishable in gameplay. More info
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component is powered by the PhysX 3 Vehicles SDK.

This tutorial takes you through the process of creating a basic functioning car.

To start, select GameObjectThe fundamental object in Unity scenes, which can represent characters, props, scenery, cameras, waypoints, and more. A GameObject’s functionality is defined by the Components attached to it. More info
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> 3D ObjectA 3D GameObject such as a cube, terrain or ragdoll. More info
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> Plane. This is the ground the car is going to drive on. To keep it simple, make sure the ground has a Transform of 0 (on the Transform component in the Inspector Window, click the Settings cog and click Reset). Increase the Transform’s Scale fields to 100 to make the Plane bigger.

Create a basic car skeleton

  1. First, add a GameObject to act as the car root GameObject. To do this, go to GameObject > Create Empty. Change the GameObject’s name to car_root.
  2. Add a Physics 3D RigidbodyA component that allows a GameObject to be affected by simulated gravity and other forces. More info
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    component to car_root. The default mass of 1kg is too light for the default suspension settings; change it to 1500kg to make it much heavier.
  3. Next, create the car body Collider. Go to GameObject > 3D Object > Cube. Make this cube a child GameObject under car_root. Reset the Transform to 0 to make it perfectly aligned in local space. The car is oriented along the Z axis, so set the Transform’s Z Scale to 3.
  4. Add the wheels root. Select car_root and GameObject > Create Empty Child. Change the name to wheels. Reset the Transform on it. This GameObject is not mandatory, but it is useful for tuning and debugging later.
  5. To create the first wheel, select the wheels GameObject, go to GameObject > Create Empty Child, and name it frontLeft. Reset the Transform, then set the Transform Position X to –1, Y to 0, and Z to 1. To add a Collider to the wheel, go to Add component > Physics > Wheel ColliderA special collider for grounded vehicles. It has built-in collision detection, wheel physics, and a slip-based tire friction model. It can be used for objects other than wheels, but it is specifically designed for vehicles with wheels. More info
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    .
  6. Duplicate the frontLeft GameObject. Change the Transform’s X position to 1. Change the name to frontRight.
  7. Select both the frontLeft and frontRight GameObjects. Duplicate them. Change the Transform’s Z position of both GameObjects to –1. Change the names to rearLeft and rearRight respectively.
  8. Finally, select the car_root GameObject and use the Move Tool to raise it slightly above the ground.

Now you should be able to see something like this:

To make this car actually drivable, you need to write a controller for it. The following code sample works as a controller:

using UnityEngine;
using System.Collections;
using System.Collections.Generic;
    
public class SimpleCarController : MonoBehaviour {
    public List<AxleInfo> axleInfos; // the information about each individual axle
    public float maxMotorTorque; // maximum torque the motor can apply to wheel
    public float maxSteeringAngle; // maximum steer angle the wheel can have
        
    public void FixedUpdate()
    {
        float motor = maxMotorTorque * Input.GetAxis("Vertical");
        float steering = maxSteeringAngle * Input.GetAxis("Horizontal");
            
        foreach (AxleInfo axleInfo in axleInfos) {
            if (axleInfo.steering) {
                axleInfo.leftWheel.steerAngle = steering;
                axleInfo.rightWheel.steerAngle = steering;
            }
            if (axleInfo.motor) {
                axleInfo.leftWheel.motorTorque = motor;
                axleInfo.rightWheel.motorTorque = motor;
            }
        }
    }
}
    
[System.Serializable]
public class AxleInfo {
    public WheelCollider leftWheel;
    public WheelCollider rightWheel;
    public bool motor; // is this wheel attached to motor?
    public bool steering; // does this wheel apply steer angle?
}

Create a new C# script (Add Component > New Script), on the car_root GameObject, copy this sample into the script file and save it. You can tune the script parameters as shown below; experiment with the settings and enter Play Mode to test the results.

The following settings are very effective as a car controller:

Hint: Make sure to increase the size of AxleInfo.

You can have up to 20 wheels on a single vehicle instance, with each of them applying steering, motor or braking torque.

Next, move on to visual wheels. As you can see, a Wheel Collider doesn’t apply the simulated wheel position and rotation back to the Wheel Collider’s Transform, so adding visual wheel requires some tricks.

You need some wheel geometry here. You can make a simple wheel shape out of a cylinder. There could be several approaches to adding visual wheels: making it so that you have to assign visual wheels manually in script properties, or writing some logic to find the corresponding visual wheel automatically. This tutorial follows the second approach. Attach the visual wheels to the Wheel Collider GameObjects.

Next, change the controller script:

using UnityEngine;
using System.Collections;
using System.Collections.Generic;

[System.Serializable]
public class AxleInfo {
    public WheelCollider leftWheel;
    public WheelCollider rightWheel;
    public bool motor;
    public bool steering;
}
     
public class SimpleCarController : MonoBehaviour {
    public List<AxleInfo> axleInfos; 
    public float maxMotorTorque;
    public float maxSteeringAngle;
     
    // finds the corresponding visual wheel
    // correctly applies the transform
    public void ApplyLocalPositionToVisuals(WheelCollider collider)
    {
        if (collider.transform.childCount == 0) {
            return;
        }
     
        Transform visualWheel = collider.transform.GetChild(0);
     
        Vector3 position;
        Quaternion rotation;
        collider.GetWorldPose(out position, out rotation);
     
        visualWheel.transform.position = position;
        visualWheel.transform.rotation = rotation;
    }
     
    public void FixedUpdate()
    {
        float motor = maxMotorTorque * Input.GetAxis("Vertical");
        float steering = maxSteeringAngle * Input.GetAxis("Horizontal");
     
        foreach (AxleInfo axleInfo in axleInfos) {
            if (axleInfo.steering) {
                axleInfo.leftWheel.steerAngle = steering;
                axleInfo.rightWheel.steerAngle = steering;
            }
            if (axleInfo.motor) {
                axleInfo.leftWheel.motorTorque = motor;
                axleInfo.rightWheel.motorTorque = motor;
            }
            ApplyLocalPositionToVisuals(axleInfo.leftWheel);
            ApplyLocalPositionToVisuals(axleInfo.rightWheel);
        }
    }
}

One important parameter of the Wheel Collider component is Force App Point Distance. This is the distance from the base of the resting wheel to the point where the wheel forces are applied. The default value is 0, which means to apply the forces at the base of the resting wheel, but actually, it is wise to have this point located somewhere slightly below the car’s centre of mass.

Continuous collision detection (CCD)
Physics Debug Visualization
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