I just returned from a tour with my '26 Depot Hack in which I suddenly had a steering issue develop that caused a huge amount of stress for me. Below is a brief (-ok, maybe somewhat brief!

This car was professionally restored about 12 years ago and has been a veteran of many tours. I have personally driven this vehicle at mph speeds in the higher 40s with a very stable steering, and it has never felt unsafe or scary for me or my kids driving it. Prior to this tour, we did a very thorough nut & bolt check along with packing wheel bearings, replacing 10 year old tubes, and giving the vehicle a thorough check just so we would not have any issues on the tour. Before the tour at the shop, and on the pre-day of the tour, this vehicle was driven some and everything was fine. On the first portion of Day 1's tour, for 30-40 miles, the vehicle steered well just like normal. After lunch we were driving on some rutted sandy roads and I noticed that steering was becoming 'darty' which was a little scary so I slowed down and it seemed to straighten-up. At that point I blamed the erratic handling to the road conditions. Once back on blacktop, the car still wanted to wander slightly but the pavement was not the best, so again I just attributed it to the roads. Then a few miles later as I was making a left-hand turn at a traffic signal, about ½-way thru the turn, the car suddenly made an instant left turn that made my heart stop!! As soon as I 'reeled it in' it seem to steer well again. I pulled over and looked under the front expecting to see a broken/loose wishbone radius rod cap or maybe a loose Steering (Pitman) Arm. Everything looked tight so I cautiously preceded on but I drove it with a death grip on the steering wheel. Once to the hotel, I crawled underneath and could not see anything loose in the steering. I consulted a few experts for ideas who admitted the roads were very rutted and thought that may be it. Again, I found nothing loose after checking nuts & bolts, so I felt they were right about the roads. The next day's steering was about the same in which it would drive well for maybe 15-30 minutes and then suddenly become very loose as it wandered in the road. At that morning's stop, I decided to add a round of toe-in on the tie-rod thinking that would take away the "wandering" in the steering. Once back on the road, I found that adjustment affected nothing. So at lunch, I gobbled my food down and then went out to the car for another look. This time, I layed down in front of the car instead of under it as I had previously done. That is when I found the issue. Have a look at the video I linked below!!
So in a nutshell, it appears the T-3823 leather spring pad that was placed there during the restoration had/has roughly a life of about 12 years before it disintegrated and fell out as we were driving on this tour. Once it was gone, there apparently was enough clearance between the crossmember and the top spring leaf to allow the tie-bolt to jump out of the centering hole during a turn or a bump, and then the spring would suddenly slide to one side of the crossmember which affected the position of the steering connecting rod in relationship to the right steering arm location. The 'fix' for me at that point was to slide the head of the spring's tie-bolt back into the hole in the crossmember, and then tighten the front spring mounting clip nuts. From that point on in the tour, the wandering and occasional violent steering went away. Hopefully my experience will cause someone to be aware of what can happen when these pads become damaged. Maybe someone (i.e.: ME

https://youtu.be/M5m5FW965JE