Well, Here's the thing.
A customer of mine experienced a sudden electric power steering failure.
Fortunately it happened in the owners driveway rather than on the road.
Power steering is nice but it shouldn't be essential. with older vehicles with hydraulic systems it is my anecdotal experience that they are still drivable if the system fails for any reason, just a bit heavy. (One also tends to get some warning if they are going to fail, screeching belts, noisy pumps etc)
But with this vehicle, (A VW Passat) the car is completely undrivable without the PAS!
I am no 98Lb weakling, I have various automotive fluids delivered in 200L drums which I roll to where I want them and then upend (200L antifreeze=220Kg+
) .
But even I struggled really hard to turn the wheel on this vehicle, even after pumping the tyres up to max rated pressure (50PSI). If this fault had occurred while the owner (Or more to the point, his wife) was negotiating a corner or been going round a roundabout it would have happened with absolutely no warning and there is no doubt in my mind that they would have completely lost control of the car. It really is that bad!
How can it be legal to manufacture a vehicle with such a potentially catastrophic failure mode?
Surely systems as essential as brakes and steering should continue to function safely even if the electrical and/or servo assist systems fail.
When did it become acceptable to fail to ensure that critical systems have a reliable mechanical back up?
There is a reason why I prefer my 25 year old vehicles....

A customer of mine experienced a sudden electric power steering failure.
Fortunately it happened in the owners driveway rather than on the road.
Power steering is nice but it shouldn't be essential. with older vehicles with hydraulic systems it is my anecdotal experience that they are still drivable if the system fails for any reason, just a bit heavy. (One also tends to get some warning if they are going to fail, screeching belts, noisy pumps etc)
But with this vehicle, (A VW Passat) the car is completely undrivable without the PAS!
I am no 98Lb weakling, I have various automotive fluids delivered in 200L drums which I roll to where I want them and then upend (200L antifreeze=220Kg+

But even I struggled really hard to turn the wheel on this vehicle, even after pumping the tyres up to max rated pressure (50PSI). If this fault had occurred while the owner (Or more to the point, his wife) was negotiating a corner or been going round a roundabout it would have happened with absolutely no warning and there is no doubt in my mind that they would have completely lost control of the car. It really is that bad!
How can it be legal to manufacture a vehicle with such a potentially catastrophic failure mode?
Surely systems as essential as brakes and steering should continue to function safely even if the electrical and/or servo assist systems fail.
When did it become acceptable to fail to ensure that critical systems have a reliable mechanical back up?
There is a reason why I prefer my 25 year old vehicles....


