the reason why there is a rubber joint there is a obscure mystery. i think it could be to avoid transmission of vibrations to the steering wheels.
however i dont know any car with such rubber joint fitted to the steering column, let alone a sport car.
the rubber joint makes the steering spongy and indeed the steering of the clio is anything but pleasant. the car at high speed gets a mind on its own on account of the fact the wheels can move slightly even thouigh the steetring it is not moving at all. and if any of you gentlemen have ever driven a proper sport car this should be evident.
i have never liked the clio steering. above 160kmh it is scary in windy conditions. welding it, if properly executed, is not a "cheapskate fix", it is the proper way to go
renault engineers have screwed up there. a rubber joint on the steering of a 220kmh capable FWD car, with torque steer and all, and a joint that fails after 40.000 km at the best, is just a flaw. weld it up, i say. if the steering got back the slack after welding, then it was not welded at all or the welding failed due to poor workmanship.
replacing the column is not an option, considering that
a) i dont know any car that requires substitution of a steering column every 50.000 km
b)there is slack after as little as 20-30.000km anyway
gm
Quote: Originally posted by mike8579 on 26 January 2004
If it was meant to be welded wouldnt it have just been a solid column to begin with? There must be a reason why the joint is there.