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    Tesla's New Steering Yoke Shows Little Benefit and Potential Safety Pitfalls

    Ten CR test drivers chronicle their driving difficulties with the steering wheel replacement in our new Model S

    2021 Tesla Model S Photo: John Powers/Consumer Reports

    My hands hurt. That’s no surprise—they usually ache at the end of the day, thanks to unlucky genetics and years of writing for a living. But as I type this, the soreness is exacerbated because of an unusual source: A few hours spent behind the new steering “yoke” of the brand-new Tesla Model S that we just purchased for testing.

    In case you missed the social media photos and videos, Tesla swapped the tried-and-true round steering wheel for a flat-bottomed, rectangular yoke reminiscent of what pilots use to steer an airplane. A traditional circular steering wheel is no longer available on the Model S nor on the mechanically related Model X SUV, even as an option. And that’s not the only steering wheel change. Flat, touch-sensitive buttons on the yoke replaced the vehicle’s turn signal and windshield wiper stalks. Those buttons also are how drivers now flash their high-beams or honk the horn.

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    Once we’ve driven our brand-new Model S a few more miles, we’ll publish a fuller First Drive review that will go into detail about all the changes to the updated car. And after we’ve completed months of in-depth testing—the same tests that Consumer Reports conducts on every car we anonymously purchase and evaluate—we’ll publish our full review of the vehicle with test results. But the yoke is such a jarring departure from the norm that we felt it deserved its own evaluation. Tweets about the yoke get thousands of likes. Friends and family ask us, “Have you tried the yoke?”

    So we devoted this entire article to the yoke. Over the course of a full week, 10 of our test drivers chronicled every time it slipped out of their hands during a turn, every ache and pain from gripping the handles during a highway cruise, every time a tester’s hands didn’t fit on the yoke’s grips, every time we accidentally honked the horn while trying to make a turn, and every time we had to look down to see which turn signal was which—so you can decide whether it’s a deal-breaker for what appears to be an otherwise excellent EV. We haven’t studied all steering wheels this closely, so we don’t have official comparative data. But we know cars, and we know steering wheels.

    If you’re a Consumer Reports member, this article is available to you. CR members have full access to the results of our Annual Auto Surveys; first-drive reviews of the newest cars, SUVs, and trucks; and our full road tests and exclusive ratings for each vehicle we buy. If you’re not a CR member, click below to join. 

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