Steering assist pulling the wheels to one side or the other. At least one or two others have noticed it and posted about it.
Is steering assist same as power car steering? If so how could it pull to one way or other?
Steering assist pulling the wheels to one side or the other. At least one or two others have noticed it and posted about it.
It is an electronic, computer-controlled, servo-assisted steering, not the same as most cars.Is steering assist same as power car steering? If so how could it pull to one way or other?
It is an electronic, computer-controlled, servo-assisted steering, not the same as most cars.
-Scotty http://forum.thestompbox.net/images/smilies/1a_snow.gif[
Wow. That's scary. I'm trusting my steering to electronic gizmos? That sounds nutty to me.
Sorry to hear about your accident. Hope you have a speedy recovery and your spyder recovers as well. It's scary to think your steering can just go crazy like that.
If a sudden steering malfunction that actually tried to steer the Spyder happened, hitting the kill switch should stop it. I would not recommend this approach, however, since there are other serious consequences. First, since you are trying hard to buck the steering at the time, you could just as suddenly swerve the other way when the DPS was killed. Second, when you hit the kill switch, you will have no power steering at all to help you anymore. The steering would get very stiff, instantly, and you could still lose control. You also have to pull in the clutch very quickly with an SM5 to avoid sudden deceleration.I agree. Scotty would the kill switch help in that circumstance?
I, like others am following this story. I can't understand how the steering can turn itself when you are in control. I would wonder if the left front brake came on via "esp" ?? That would make some sence, to make the Spyder pull to the left or a dip in the road or something like that. If the power steering failed, shouldn't it just get hard to turn and not pull to the other side of an intended turn?