Answer
From your question I can only assume that you either don't have your licence or you have it and don't quite understand how over-sterring could cause an accident or under sterring as well. When someone under-stears it means that they aren't driving in a straight line, they are all over the place. When someone over-stears, they also are all over the place. Driving a car is like walking down the sidewalk. If you walk straight, you drive straight, between the lines, not over them or around them. When a person over-stears, it usually means that they don't have a lot of driving experience.
generally oversteer as the tyre 'rolls' on the rim
RacingIn my opinion Neutral steer in a racing sense does not truly exist.A car can not be set up to be truly neutral as the corner entry speed, the way the driver transitions from straight to the corner, throttle setting as the car exits the corner all change the over and under steer tendencies.You can make a car more or less neutral for a particular driver, but the only truly neutral cornering I have ever seen was at a skid pad, this happened after a days work and the car over steered on entry and was neutral-ish while under steady speed around the circle.Street carsNeutral steer is the straight ahead on the motor way or freeway and requiring no steering input to track straight.This is the ideal the manufacturers try to achieve but again not really possible.
The homograph of steer is steer (either meaning to steer a car or the animal steer).
To 'Steer' A car wheel, or to Feed a Baby 'steer.' A steer can also be a baby cow.
Example: Caparo T1 You can only corner well if you go really well in this car, or it will under steer very badly and kill you.
Under the hood, Lf lower area. This car has a reservoir,blackin color
Steer very gently to the side that is on the ground, too quickly and the vehicle will over correct and roll the other way.
Like a car
You erect a protective barrier to keep a steer from jumping over the corral.
Steered is the past tense of steer: He steered the car into the space perfectly on his first try.
It attaches the wheel/brakes to the car and allows the wheel to move up/down over bumps and steer. It also has to support the weight of the vehicle/occupants and cargo.
Example: Caparo T1 You can only corner well if you go really well in this car, or it will under steer very badly and kill you.