01. One caster develops greater rolling resistance
Wear, damage, or misalignment causes one wheel to resist forward motion more than the others.
Everyday Engineering
An engineering problem every grocery shopper has encountered, and very few have thought about. You take hold of a shopping cart and push it forward. Immediately, quietly, it begins drifting left, or right, requiring a constant unconscious correction that continues for the entire shop. This is not your fault. It is a wheel. The answer involves caster wheel mechanics, uneven wear, differential friction, and the specific design decision that makes supermarket carts almost inevitably develop this problem.
Quick answer
Supermarket carts drift to one side primarily because caster wheels develop uneven wear from repeated contact with floor irregularities and asymmetric loading, causing one wheel to roll less freely than the others and pulling the cart steadily in that direction. Even a perfectly new cart can pull to one side due to a single slightly misaligned or differently tensioned caster swivel, and floors themselves can exacerbate the problem through barely perceptible slopes.

The mystery
The answer involves caster wheel mechanics, uneven wear, differential friction, and the specific design decision that makes supermarket carts almost inevitably develop this problem.
The short answer
Supermarket carts drift to one side primarily because caster wheels develop uneven wear from repeated contact with floor irregularities and asymmetric loading, causing one wheel to roll less freely than the others and pulling the cart steadily in that direction.
The twist
Even a perfectly new cart can pull to one side due to a single slightly misaligned or differently tensioned caster swivel, and floors themselves can exacerbate the problem through barely perceptible slopes.
Common mistake
Most people assume the drift is always caused by a faulty wheel.
Everyday Engineering
Push it a short distance on the flat and release - it should track straight without steering input.
The inventor of the shopping cart
An Oklahoma supermarket owner who invented the shopping cart in 1937 and had to pay people to use them initially to demonstrate their usefulness.
Where caster wheel behavior matters
Medical equipment on casters requires careful wheel maintenance for precise positioning during procedures.
Where caster wheel behavior matters
Chair casters develop the same uneven wear, causing office chairs to roll asymmetrically over time.
Is it always a wheel problem?
Floor slope is a significant contributing factor and produces consistent drift across all carts in the same area of a store.
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