- Joined
- Jun 13, 2022
- Messages
- 7,786
- Reaction score
- 12,254
- Points
- 3,398
- Location (town/city + country)
- Paignton, UK
- Driving
- MG4
We'll agree to disagree then!
Indeed! I do wish they had implemented progressive steering as I'd actually have loved to have one.We'll agree to disagree then!
Ill get one but i doubt itll be on very long lol. Great for cool points
I've ridden it quite a bit now, and the steering is definitely different, especially in slow, sharp turns.Wow!
Looking forward to the updates over the next month of how it drives
Its definitely not as efficient and as comfortable as a proper steering wheel. I mean what could go wrong if a situation is misjudged and theres a need to quickly counter steer while the wheel is a certain angleWhy not on long?
These arguments are all about familiarity. With practice, a yoke can be every bit as good as a normal wheel. Not the same: it is better for some things and worse for others, but every bit as effective as a way of steering a vehicle.Its definitely not as efficient and as comfortable as a proper steering wheel. I mean what could go wrong if a situation is misjudged and theres a need to quickly counter steer while the wheel is a certain angle
Sorry, but this is demonstrably false. You can practice and get "used to it" as much as you like, but a yoke on a non progressive steering system, requiring multi-turns lock to lock is harder to use safely, especially in emergency manoeuvre situations. This is a fact, full stop!These arguments are all about familiarity. With practice, a yoke can be every bit as good as a normal wheel. Not the same: it is better for some things and worse for others, but every bit as effective as a way of steering a vehicle.
The amount of counter steering needed at speed is small and if not at speed, the risks are low.
Yes, early on a yoke is going to feel very strange and awkward, but there is nothing inherently safe about great big wheel that requires a lot of hand movement to turn significantly.
The main issue will be having a yoke and still driving normal cars: switching between the two will be difficult and that's a fair argument. But if someone has only a yoke and practices with it, I do not think there are any safety issues.
This can not be understated, even more so on a very high powered car. People want these for cosmetic effect, but that is the only benefit. They're under the radar due to such low numbers in use, but in the event of wider uptake of yokes on none progressive steering cars, they'd end up getting banned in western countries on safety grounds as the accident rate numbers would be way higher than the norm.Its definitely not as efficient and as comfortable as a proper steering wheel. I mean what could go wrong if a situation is misjudged and there's a need to quickly counter steer while the wheel is a certain angle
Even the squarer versions that were tried still offered something to hold on to, the yoke is effectively barely the bottom half of wheel.Yes you're right @Paulie68, it's taken 100 years to perfect the round steering wheel, OK the MG one is slightly octagonal, and Austin experimented with a square one on the Allegro in the 70s, but the years have proved that circular is better, easier, and safer.