Hi Friends.
I have a 2002 Mercedes-Benz W163 ML320. I previously started a thread about the car being very tiring to drive. There are several contributing factors, but one of them is that the steering feels quite heavy, which is common for this model.
However, a friend drove it yesterday and said that it is not just heaviness. The steering wheel also does not return to center properly after turning.
From what I think, self-centering is not directly related to power steering performance, so I am trying to identify what actually causes the steering to return to center and what could reduce or eliminate that effect.
The car is running relatively wide/high-profile tires (255/65R16 29PSI ). Could tire profile or pressure contribute to poor self-centering, or should I focus more on suspension geometry or steering components?
I would also like to understand the underlying theory, so that in the future when i test drive a new car to buy, if i experience such issue I can know whether this behavior is model-specific or caused by a correctable issue.
I have a 2002 Mercedes-Benz W163 ML320. I previously started a thread about the car being very tiring to drive. There are several contributing factors, but one of them is that the steering feels quite heavy, which is common for this model.
However, a friend drove it yesterday and said that it is not just heaviness. The steering wheel also does not return to center properly after turning.
From what I think, self-centering is not directly related to power steering performance, so I am trying to identify what actually causes the steering to return to center and what could reduce or eliminate that effect.
The car is running relatively wide/high-profile tires (255/65R16 29PSI ). Could tire profile or pressure contribute to poor self-centering, or should I focus more on suspension geometry or steering components?
I would also like to understand the underlying theory, so that in the future when i test drive a new car to buy, if i experience such issue I can know whether this behavior is model-specific or caused by a correctable issue.