Ever push a shopping cart from the wrong end? That’s basically rear wheel steering. Turns out that you get a lot of undesirable behavior when steering from the rear. Front steering wants to straighten out of a turn, but rear steering tends to result in oversteer and fishtailing. When braking, the vehicle’s weight is more on the front wheels, so with front steering you retain control. And more simply, the driver sits at the front of the vehicle, so it’s mechanically simpler to connect to the steering wheel.
2 biggest reasons are how sketchy anything rear steering is at any decent rate of speed, test this in an empty parking lot some night if your car will do more than 20 in reverse, and the fact when you rear steer the back end goes the opposite way when you begin to turn meaning if you turn at a stop light and someone is beside you, you will hit them
Steering the front wheels gives you a much greater degree of control and is in general less squirrely. Think of it this way. If you steer the back wheels it’s like you are steering where the car has been where with the front you are steering closer to where are you going. It is worth mentioning that very few cars are equipped with 4 wheel steering systems such as the hicas systems on some older Nissan sports cars.
Go into an empty parking lot. Put your car in drive, and accelerate to 25 miles per hour. Now turn the wheel. What happens? Your car turns in the direction you turned the wheel. No problem.
Now put your car in reverse, and accelerate to 25 miles per hour. Turn the wheel. What happens? Your whole car spins around to where you’re facing the direction of travel again.
Historically, because the first car was more or less a horse-less horse carriage. And those had the front wheel steered because the horse pulled it.
Later it was actually tried but if the car is fast then it’s not good because it makes the car behave like a flag. A car called Dymaxion was done with rear steering, but it was a huge failure.
Forklifts however, do have rear wheel steering because it’s much better to precisely aim with the fork.
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