wavingpine11
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Central PA
I like this discussion--very amusing. I'm amazed it has gone so far. I have the 242 case in my XJ and I installed an ox locker in the front to avoid having to negate the full-time position's usefulness and safety on moderately tractive surfaces. This is the key point--how much traction is present. In 2wd, before I installed the rear auto-locker, I would regularly experience the famous one-wheel-drive effect when starting out on freshly rain-covered roads. The rear locker prevents this from happening now.
The torque from the drive shaft is used to cause the cross pin to push the geared faces of the auto locker's gears tightly together, preventing them from differentiating. I think most of us would agree with this statement.
As we all know, differentiation is very useful feature provided on our axles as a convenience to those people who like to be able to turn their vehicles without having to break one of the tires free, or have something else break in its stead. There is a reason why very few people would think to spool the front of their DD, and since sending torque to the front diff with an auto locker makes it lock, you may as well have a spooled front because while enough torque is pushing the front to lock the unit, you are going to have all of the negative effects of being spooled, only worse, because it may unlock if you let off the gas enough, making handling unpredictable. Sure, plenty of people will spool the rear and live with it, but the front is pretty crucial to making an easy turn like 99.99% of the rest of the automobile owning public enjoys.
The point of the full-time system is that it is a great ON-ROAD system. On asphalt or concrete, unless it is snow or ice covered, in which case you'd want to be in part-time 4wd, you still have lots of available traction. Dividing the available torque from the transmission by 4 rather than 2 means that you break free less easily because you are effectively only sending about half the amount of torque to the rear tires vs. being in 2wd. Would you drive in full-time on solid ice? No--it would be useless one wheel drive all over again. Actually, before I had lockers in the current rig, I was out on an easy dirt trail in the winter. I had it in full-time unknowingly (I had driven to the trail that way) and got stuck on a basically flat part of the trail. It took a long time to work my way out, and, man, I felt stupid when I noticed afterwards that I was, in fact, in full-time rather than part-time 4wd where I would have at least been pushing two wheels rahter than one. Wet road is much more tractive than icy trail. Auto locker plus full-time 4wd on-road is just a bad idea. Goodburton gets it! I get it. . . Any dissenters want to climb on board and get it, too?
--wavingpine11
The torque from the drive shaft is used to cause the cross pin to push the geared faces of the auto locker's gears tightly together, preventing them from differentiating. I think most of us would agree with this statement.
As we all know, differentiation is very useful feature provided on our axles as a convenience to those people who like to be able to turn their vehicles without having to break one of the tires free, or have something else break in its stead. There is a reason why very few people would think to spool the front of their DD, and since sending torque to the front diff with an auto locker makes it lock, you may as well have a spooled front because while enough torque is pushing the front to lock the unit, you are going to have all of the negative effects of being spooled, only worse, because it may unlock if you let off the gas enough, making handling unpredictable. Sure, plenty of people will spool the rear and live with it, but the front is pretty crucial to making an easy turn like 99.99% of the rest of the automobile owning public enjoys.
The point of the full-time system is that it is a great ON-ROAD system. On asphalt or concrete, unless it is snow or ice covered, in which case you'd want to be in part-time 4wd, you still have lots of available traction. Dividing the available torque from the transmission by 4 rather than 2 means that you break free less easily because you are effectively only sending about half the amount of torque to the rear tires vs. being in 2wd. Would you drive in full-time on solid ice? No--it would be useless one wheel drive all over again. Actually, before I had lockers in the current rig, I was out on an easy dirt trail in the winter. I had it in full-time unknowingly (I had driven to the trail that way) and got stuck on a basically flat part of the trail. It took a long time to work my way out, and, man, I felt stupid when I noticed afterwards that I was, in fact, in full-time rather than part-time 4wd where I would have at least been pushing two wheels rahter than one. Wet road is much more tractive than icy trail. Auto locker plus full-time 4wd on-road is just a bad idea. Goodburton gets it! I get it. . . Any dissenters want to climb on board and get it, too?
--wavingpine11