Originally Posted by
tact
I think I get what you meant to say above (...that it only takes one wheel free spinning to unload the whole driveline, when centre diff is unlocked. Assuming also no TC etc).
Not quite true to say that a defender is only ever spinning one wheel, even it if is the most common scenario. It takes talent, skill, and devilishly good looks - but I have certainly had both fronts, both rears, or diagonals wheelspinning before cringing [bigsad] and remembering late to engage the CDL.
Okaaaaaaaaay..... am calling this out too.
In a vehicle with open diffs (front, centre, rear) and no TC:
- Locking the centre diff just moves from the above situation (any ONE wheel freespinning unloads the whole drive train), to...
- a situation where the whole driveline is unloaded when ONE front and ONE rear are freespinning. (e.g. crossaxled)
"True 4wd" surely must require both front and rear diffs to be locked too. Locking just the centre diff is just a halfway step in that direction. Yes?
If locking the centre diff is such a good thing to do then locking all 3 diffs must be so much the better! Yes?
No.
I doubt anyone here will advocate locking all 3 diffs the moment you leave the tarmac - we all are so clever we know that we'd have a terrible time steering with all 3 diffs locked. Well.... not all the time, but sometimes.
Guess what... just locking the centre diff also has an undesireable side effect. It is just less tragic, less noticable, than driving around with all 3 diffs locked. It goes like this:
- we don't lock our centre diffs on the tarmac because we will get transmission wind up. We all know what causes that.
- if you jack up a wheel when there is significant transmission wind up present... just before that wheel leaves the tarmac it will slip/skid a bit and release the tension.
- on looser surfaces, even hard packed clay, that same little bit of wheel slippage on the track surface is going on and on and on - constantly as you drive down the trail.
- when there is no centre differential in play (not there, or locked) you are in effect going to have one wheel (any one of the 4, randomly) experiencing a little breaking of traction constantly.
- Is this "true 3 wheel drive"? Albeit somewhat "quantum" in nature since you can never really know which of the 4 wheels will be slipping at any specific instant. [bigwhistle]
- and under some situations this forced breaking of traction causes significant understeer. Not all the time, but certainly sometimes and its never a highly desireable handling trait.
This is also written up in the third epistle of Ashcroft to the unwashed about the benefits of the holy centre ATB:
"...when racing fast on a low traction surface, the vehicle will not handle well when locked but is likely to wheel spin when unlocked." (i.e. so buy an ATB from Ashcroft being the prescribed solution, so you can have the best of both worlds. Or possibly - leave the thing unlocked, don't be racing so hard on the throttle, avoid wheelspin that way and don't buy an ATB?)
One does not have to be "racing" and the surface does not have to be "low traction"... I have experienced sphincter clenching moments tootling along just a little too fast on a dirt road when a sneaky off-camber bit mid bend caught me by surprise - understeer causing me significant angst. Making me think that had I NOT locked the CDL - I'd have likely driven the bend much more comfortably with just a little "Tokyo drift" avoiding any one wheel wheelspinning wildly by lifting the throttle pedal just a little for balance.
I actually think the best handling situation is being able to drive all wheels differentially as needed on most surfaces - just avoiding wheelspin like the plague. For that open diffs will suffice if you have a good feel for the loud pedal to avoid wild wheelspin. If lacking that skill then:
- the poorest solution is to take all diffs out of the equation (3 locked)
- less poor but still not the best, take just the centre diff out of the equation (lock it, live with having a random wheel breaking traction at every moment)
- best driver aid being to fit ATBs all round to allow differentiation and control (within its limits) wheelspin.
If the only tool in the toolkit is a hammer (or a centre diff lock), then the best you might be able to do is to be wise about when to use it. When to lock the CDL. And when not to.