Close Menu
Tech Nova Mindset – Empower Innovation and Forward Thinking

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Multiple small Tennessee counties pass temporary data center bans — Nashville also passed near-unanimous moratorium on first reading

    June 16, 2026

    Russia seeks mathematician’s extradition | Scientific American

    June 16, 2026

    SpaceX went public – Europe’s SpaceTech founders and investors have thoughts

    June 16, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Multiple small Tennessee counties pass temporary data center bans — Nashville also passed near-unanimous moratorium on first reading
    • Russia seeks mathematician’s extradition | Scientific American
    • SpaceX went public – Europe’s SpaceTech founders and investors have thoughts
    • I modified my PC setup with a 15-in-1 docking station, and the benefits go beyond more ports
    • Inside the fight over Claude Mythos 5
    • Anthropic Is Still at Odds With the White House Over Claude Fable 5
    • Xbox is closing down Hellblade creator Ninja Theory
    • The best supernatural show on TV is on a platform you probably forgot you subscribed to
    Tech Nova Mindset – Empower Innovation and Forward Thinking
    • Home
    • Gadgets
    • Reviews
    • Tech News
    • Future Tech
    • AI & Robotics
    • How-To Guides
    • More
      • Cybersecurity
      • Startups & Innovation
    Tech Nova Mindset – Empower Innovation and Forward Thinking
    Home»Tech News»The Deceptively Tricky Art of Designing a Steering Wheel
    Tech News

    The Deceptively Tricky Art of Designing a Steering Wheel

    kirklandc008@gmail.comBy kirklandc008@gmail.comMarch 29, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    The Deceptively Tricky Art of Designing a Steering Wheel
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Cars didn’t always have steering wheels. The very first car—the 1885 Benz Patent-Motorwagen, invented by Karl Benz—used a tiller system: a horizontal bar with a handle mounted to a vertical bar. The lever-like handle was similar in many respects to a boat’s rudder. Amazingly, it would be another nine years before French engineer Alfred Vacheron saw sense and fitted the first known steering wheel to his 4-horsepower Panhard for the Paris-Rouen race. Just four years later, in 1898, Panhard made the infinitely preferable and safer steering wheel standard on all its cars. And we’ve been using them ever since.

    “A car is the aggregation of multiple products, and, in many ways, we’re designing furniture.”

    Jony Ive, designer

    Hans-Peter Wunderlich is Mercedes’ creative director of interior design. He has been designing steering wheels for 35 years. “I started in 1991 on my first,” he tells me. “A steering wheel is really the most challenging and difficult element to sculpture, to design, to develop in the car.” It is so difficult that Wunderlich has used the wheel as a test on potential recruits.

    “When we hire a designer, I have given them the task, after I see a nice portfolio, to draw me a steering wheel,” he says. “The steering wheel is, for me, the proof. Should I hire them or not? If a designer is able to create a perfect steering wheel, even just as a scribble, then they will be a good designer for the total interior of a car.”

    CAD design renders of Mercedes and Maybach designs before prototyping.

    Courtesy of Mercedes

    It was this challenge, in part, that attracted Ive and his team. “Our starting point was trying to understand the essential nature of the problem to be solved, and that normally means dismissing received wisdom,” Ive tells me. “A car is the aggregation of multiple products, and, in many ways, we’re designing furniture. We’re designing complex and sophisticated input methods. One of the challenges was to try to create cohesion. You don’t get something to be cohesive by a set of rules. That was a wonderful new challenge, and one wrestled with over a number of years.”

    For both Ive and Wunderlich, science accompanies the art of design. They talk of the intricacies of the ergonomics, the logic of the switches, factoring in an “exploding element in the center” (the airbag), which is getting more and more complicated, says Wunderlich. “Even the rim is an ergonomic science in itself,” he adds, saying that his team works hand in glove with Mercedes’ in-house ergonomics department on these stages. “It’s almost 50-50. We get requirements data from engineering and ergonomics.”

    Spinning Out

    Look closely at your steering wheel rim; in cross-section, it won’t be round. Cut it into segments, and each will likely have a different profile, aiming to optimize grip wherever your hands grasp the wheel. Even the padding has to be just right. “It mustn’t be like bone but also not too fat. You need a nice balance,” Wunderlich says. “[It must say] this car is solid, it’s quality, it’s strong, it’s powerful, but it’s not crude.”

    “If you hold the wheel on the three and nine o’clock positions, you can carve in with your fingers on the rear of the rim—so you have the hump, the scallop of the rim,” Wunderlich says. “And then we carve into a valley where your fingers could rest. That means your hands can close. You have the feeling you’re holding the car. This is so challenging, because in that area you have such a technical structure to maintain—complex electronics and heating elements. We torture the engineers to keep that area so small so we can sculpt it out.”

    Ive tortured Raffaele De Simone, Ferrari’s chief engineer and head development driver. De Simone is sometimes described at the company as “Customer No. 1” because, apparently, no Ferrari road car leaves the factory until he is satisfied with its performance.

    art Deceptively designing steering Tricky wheel
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    kirklandc008@gmail.com
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Xbox is closing down Hellblade creator Ninja Theory

    June 16, 2026

    Sundar Pichai faces boos, walkout at Stanford graduation ceremony over Google’s Israel, ICE ties

    June 16, 2026

    Will the World Cup be safe? New report finds huge surge in cyberattacks targeting professional sports organizations

    June 16, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Google DeepMind Plans to Track AGI Progress With These 10 Traits of General Intelligence

    March 21, 20263 Views

    The AirPods 4 and Lego’s brick-ified Grogu are our favorite deals this week

    October 12, 20253 Views

    Nothing CEO says phone prices are going to keep going up

    June 12, 20262 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

    Recent Posts
    • Multiple small Tennessee counties pass temporary data center bans — Nashville also passed near-unanimous moratorium on first reading
    • Russia seeks mathematician’s extradition | Scientific American
    • SpaceX went public – Europe’s SpaceTech founders and investors have thoughts
    • I modified my PC setup with a 15-in-1 docking station, and the benefits go beyond more ports
    • Inside the fight over Claude Mythos 5

    Multiple small Tennessee counties pass temporary data center bans — Nashville also passed near-unanimous moratorium on first reading

    June 16, 2026

    Russia seeks mathematician’s extradition | Scientific American

    June 16, 2026

    SpaceX went public – Europe’s SpaceTech founders and investors have thoughts

    June 16, 2026

    I modified my PC setup with a 15-in-1 docking station, and the benefits go beyond more ports

    June 16, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer
    © 2026 TechNovaMindset. Designed by By Pro.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.