
Originally Posted by
bikeman;2704043[I
My question is; how effective is the TC, seeing its on the rear.[/I]
Phil.
Hi bikeman,
TC is astonishingly effective. It works particularly well in the type of slippery slopes you get in the Vic high country. It came with my LSE, so I can't comment on how effective it is on a SWB. The TC came as an option with the WABCO ABS.
I can recall two occasions where it proved it's worth.
The first was when I had the relatively new car on loan up near Bright. With four blokes in the car I took it for a run on the tracks and plantation where the previous year I had taken my Series 3 LWB with a McNamara rear diff lock and either bar treads or similar. We came to a steep, muddy slope and I remarked that we wouldn't get as far as the Series 3 as we only had the standard road tyres. Boy! Was I wrong. The Rangie simply walked up it with the TC clicking on when needed and we reached the top with no fuss. The EAS was a revelation, too!
The second occasion was a decade or so later when I was part of a survey team. I had fitted front and rear diff locks but for some reason they weren't working that trip. I had to take a few people along an incredibly slippery river track with some steep sections and to make things worse I had a mysterious misfire under load which seriously limited power. Weather was terrible, too. If it had not been for the TC I doubt I would have made it up some of the hills without winching.
Mind you, on another survey on a plantation near Narbethong, with earlier generation AT tyres (Hancook from memory) I couldn't get up one wet muddy hill with both diff locks engaged as the tyres simply clogged up with mud! Tried runs with TC only, rear lock only and both locks. Got a bit further with both locks, but not much.
Your car with rear only TC and EAS and decent AT tyres will easily go anywhere in the Vic high country (unless you go looking for trouble).
Enjoy your trip.
2013 D4 expedition equipped
1966 Army workshop trailer
(previously SII 2.25 swb, SIII 2.25 swb & lwb, P38 Vogue, 1993 LSE 3.9V8 then HS2.8)
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