I hope so, engineering failures are one of my interests especially material related stuff.
Another non-related example of a poor choice of material I will pick on Toyota here. Ever notice older Toyotas usually have yellowed/cloudy headlights, whoever picked what material to use for their headlights should be kicked in the ass. Every Toyota I've owned had this problem, every Ford I ever owned the headlights remained crystal clear. Toyota's choice of material most likely met the requirements set forth, in my opinion they defined the problem incorrectly and ended up with an incorrect solution.
Sometimes it's literally just a "Will it be a problem before they get out of warranty" math based choice.
Ford made a section of the Explorers tailgate out of plastic for a while. You will often see them with vertical cracks.
I'm also interested in "generational failure" items when the whole industry jumped on a bandwagon and they all had issues. The knock on effects can be interesting. My 87 GLHS had a bad steering rack in the early 2000s. There were a few rebuilds around but no place to rebuild mine.
Seems there was a change in racks in the mid eighties. Caused enough problems that a whole aftermarket industry solely devoted to rebuilding racks sprang up. But once the problems were identified and fixed, and the initial bow wave of racks were fixed, not enough business to keep them all going so the bottom dropped out.
Late 90s, a lot of maker switched to a mild steel for brake and fuel lines. 10 years later they were all rusting. Caught the bow wave of that wit my 99 Blazer. Long brake line ruptured right ahead of the rear axle splitter block. No pre-bent lines then, but now you can get them for everything now.