You have a point here Craig; my Xm was pulling away from standstill
from the road side accelerating reasonably hard when it popped - there
was a small amount of steering angle but not to a large degree. I must
say it scared the hell out of me as I thought I'd struck something low
down out of my line of vision almost like a post etc due to the way the
bonnet folded up in front of me. The rubber seemed to be the main culprit
on close examination though the metalwork wasn't rustfree - a bit of an
anomily as every subsequent failure I've seen has been the metal
shoulder plate as Malcolm has said.
The XM had good spheres fitted and this was certainly my first knowledge
of this kind of failure back about 4-5 years ago although sadly, I've seen
a load since - a Xantia VSX I actually purchased for no real money (with
a BRAND NEW MOT) simply BECAUSE OF THE STRUT FAILURE was bodily
damaged where the driver swerved violently at speed as he overreacted
to the popped strut wiping the side of the car out - he said it was a real
"brown trouser moment"...
I live in a very twisty hilly (

) part of the world with fantastic
roads and sometimes ponder whether I'd ever be found, lying upside
down off the bend in the big hedge somewhere for days after my "off" as
a result of a strut boing phutt. Whilst I regularly check the struts of the
many Xantiae and Xm I drive off and on, I simply can't trust them. The
only answer seems to be multiple AND expensive purchase of new ones
which cannot reasonably be £ justified!! Guess I could drive like a boring
slow paranoid git like the other 80% of the drivers round these parts
instead...
No coincidence then that I drive my CX's more than I have been in the
recent past.
Andrew