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This Mazda Concept's Weird Steering Belt Makes the Yoke Look Ergonomic

This Mazda Concept's Weird Steering Belt Makes the Yoke Look Ergonomic photo
This Mazda Concept's Weird Steering Belt Makes the Yoke Look Ergonomic photo

Steering yokes may annoy many of us, but the idea to replace the time-tested steering wheel isn't a new one. Mazda's 1981 MX-81 Aria concept is proof of that. Penned by Marc Deschamps, then-head of design at Bertone, the MX-81 was quintessential 1980s futurism, with a Blade Runner-like exterior and an interior full of bizarre shapes and overwhelmingly complicated buttons. However, the weirdest part of the entire car, for better or worse, was its steering wheel—if you can even call it that.

Countless concepts of the '70s and '80s had unconventional steering devices, like the Citroen Karin and Maserati Boomerang. Yet, the MX-81 Aria's makes almost all of them seem ordinary by comparison. Rather than physically turning a wheel, to steer the MX-81 you rotated what was essentially a conveyor belt around a rectangular steering column-slash-gauge cluster.

The column was fixed in place, as it also housed buttons for turn signals, windshield wipers, headlights, and one big honkin' pad for the horn. Deeply recessed in its center was a CRT screen, which relayed information like speed and RPMs. All that is pretty typical of '80s concept cars; what's harder to grasp is the belt clad in weird Chiclet-like nubs.

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To steer the car, you sort of had to palm the rubber nubs and push them around their fixed track, which looks unwieldy and uncomfortable. Thankfully it remained a concept, and Mazda never actually tried to bring such a design to production. You'd imagine the likelihood of a crash would be pretty high and yet, I'd still love to give it a whirl.