Loose or worn steering parts, suspension worn, tires out of balance.
The input force on a steering wheel is applied by the driver's hands as they turn the wheel. The output force from the steering wheel is then transmitted through the steering system to the tires, which ultimately turn the vehicle in the desired direction.
There could be a number of reasons, but most times that has happened to me, the tires were under-inflated. Check your tires.
Low Power Steering Fluid
It is the distance of movement that you can turn your steering wheel without it actually turning your tires. "My first car had a lot of play in the steering."
Steering into the turn. When you enter a LEFT hand turn, you turn the steering wheel so the tires turn to the Left. If the back of the car begins to slide out of the curve, then you can steer RIGHT and it will slide the car back around.
Steering into the turn. When you enter a LEFT hand turn, you turn the steering wheel so the tires turn to the Left. If the back of the car begins to slide out of the curve, then you can steer RIGHT and it will slide the car back around.
Low steering fluid can cause a steering wheel to whine when turning. A worn steering belt can also cause a steering wheel to whine when a car is being turned.
you may have a low tire or your tires are to big
The steering shaft on the car has been reversed somewhere in the middle. You would have to take it completely aprt to fix the problem.
Warn steering components? Steering box, Rack. Tie rod ends, Pitman arm, idler arm? Worn tires?
Into the skid, meaning in the direction the rear tires are going, Think of it as, "catching the skid."