What Causes the Car to Always Reverse Crookedly?
1 Answers
The reason the car always reverses crookedly is that the steering wheel is turned too early or too late. In such cases, simply adjust by turning the steering wheel to the left or right, following the principle of 'turn toward the wider side.' When the rear of the car tilts to the right during reversing, and the distance between the left rear of the car and the garage boundary line increases in the rearview mirror, you should turn the steering wheel to the left to correct the rear onto the green trajectory line. Note that when the car is parallel to the garage boundary line, quickly straighten the steering wheel; otherwise, the rear will tilt to the left again. If the rear tilts to the left, turn the steering wheel to the right. The correct reversing method is: shift into reverse gear, observe the left rearview mirror while reversing, and when the mirror shows the left wheel is about to cross the corner line of the garage, quickly turn the steering wheel fully to the left. Continue observing the distance between the rear wheel and the left corner of the garage. If the distance is exactly 30cm, no correction is needed—simply continue reversing. Watch the rearview mirror, and when the car body is parallel to the road boundary line, quickly straighten the steering wheel. If the left and right sides are uneven, make minor adjustments following the 'turn toward the wider side' principle. Observe the endpoint line at the rear of the rearview mirror, and when the lower edge of the mirror aligns with the yellow line, stop.