- 87
- Texas
Whats the point of theme? Srry flat bottom steering wheel.
That's not a cell phone...Personally, I like having the steering wheel in my lap when I drive, so it's a nice feature to me. Makes it a little easier to get in and out of the car, especially if there's stuff like a cell phone in your front pocket.
That's not a cell phone...
I've never driven a car with a flat-bottom wheel but I have driven cars with eccentric steering wheels. Why the hub of the wheel is not in the middle of the rim I have no idea. I makes for a really annoying wobble as you turn it about in a parking lot. I know why they do it, probably for gauge visibility and knee room, but it looks like a chintzy oversight to me, like some blockhead measured it wrong.
You may have heard of this but I can't remember anymore details on it.Helps accomodate your knees, especially in tight places. A lot of F1 cars in the late-1990s featured this; the Lotus T101 had a particularly D-shaped steering wheel.
Are you arguing with KITT?The shape works and there's no real reason to mess with it.
daanThe steering "wheel" of fail.
You may have heard of this but I can't remember anymore details on it.
I recall reading about an F1 driver who had been in accident and had damaged legs of some description. There is a rule that any F1 driver has to be able to get out of his car, with the steering wheel in place, in a certain amount of seconds. He was attempting to pass this test in order that he could race, but he couldn't manage to get out in time. His mechanics then took the steering wheel, and cut off the bottom part of it, so it was then D shaped. When he tried again, he managed to get out in time, so cue much cheering that he'd be allowed to race. However, the FIA official told him to get back in the car, turned the steering wheel 90 degrees and told him to try again. He failed, and they wouldn't let him race.
The only driver I've heard that failed the "5 second escape" rule was Christian Danner, in 1988. He was supposed to replace a driver mid-season (can't remember who...Schneider? Ghinzani?), but as one of the tallest drivers in F1, he had a hard time fitting into the cars of the time.
Used to be longer than five seconds, too. Seem to remember Martin Donnelly also failed after breaking his back in a crash in 1990. He was actually a fairly promising driver with some big teams looking at him, but although he healed fairly quickly it seriously slowed down his movements, meaning he couldn't pass the leaping-from-the-car test. Back then it was around 15 seconds but he still couldn't manage. Put a stop to his career.
Mansell also had difficulty with a 'small cockpit' in the '95 Mclaren. But i had a feeling he couldn't get in it in the first place to take the 'leaping-from-the-car' test.
Sometimes I wish that the DFGT is a flat-bottomed wheel, but then again, that would be very awkward for drifting. Would be better if it had interchangeable wheels though.Helps accomodate your knees, especially in tight places. A lot of F1 cars in the late-1990s featured this; the Lotus T101 had a particularly D-shaped steering wheel. On the other end of the spectrum, the latest iteration of the Toyota Prius actually has a semi-flattened bottom section of the steering wheel.
Personally, I like having the steering wheel in my lap when I drive, so it's a nice feature to me. Makes it a little easier to get in and out of the car, especially if there's stuff like a cell phone in your front pocket.
The steering "wheel" of fail.
*Picture Snip*
You may have heard of this but I can't remember anymore details on it.
I recall reading about an F1 driver who had been in accident and had damaged legs of some description. There is a rule that any F1 driver has to be able to get out of his car, with the steering wheel in place, in a certain amount of seconds. He was attempting to pass this test in order that he could race, but he couldn't manage to get out in time. His mechanics then took the steering wheel, and cut off the bottom part of it, so it was then D shaped. When he tried again, he managed to get out in time, so cue much cheering that he'd be allowed to race. However, the FIA official told him to get back in the car, turned the steering wheel 90 degrees and told him to try again. He failed, and they wouldn't let him race.
Only thing I couldn't do so easily was let it slip through my hand because you lose feeling at the flat spot.
If the F1 driver had a crash, I'm pretty sure he could straighten the steering wheel and get out.