Who knows, Carl? Nothing's perfect, that I've heard of. There's always some down-side to put up with. So you pick what does best for you, and has the least negatives - or at least the ones you can live with.
Some like to think the German engineers designed the most perfect equipment. And then they're upset when something breaks or doesn't work right. All things can break, just a fact of life.
But I agree - why not have it fail in a working mode rather than total failure?
It's kind of like the Motometer speedometers - there's a gear that tends to slip rendering the odometer inoperative. This lasted the whole run of airheads from 1970 to 1995. They never changed it! I've heard the same thing about VW and BMW car speedometers, except with them the gear is plastic. Never changed. Someone finally made metal replacements, but not Motometer (or VDO, don't recall which).
It doesn't help getting upset about it - it is what it is, so let's do what we can to resolve it. Springs do break, and sometimes there's something defective, something machined wrong, who knows? Maybe it got dropped on the assembly line and now there's a mis-alignment causing all the problems. Or something's binding. Now it's a puzzle and someone who's willing to take a good close look, and knows what he's looking at, needs to check it out.
In your position, I'd find another transmission, make sure it's in good shape and install it. Then have the original looked at and the trouble found. I would't want to ride a bike farther than I could push it home if I knew it had a ticking time bomb for a pall spring.