AWD intelligent diesel or non-intelligent petrol?
This diagram below explains how there are now 2 clutch packs to control the split of torque from rear to front, and to also fully disconnect the front drive.
The transfer box clutch pack acts “like a differential” and can go from fully open with no drive to the front and 100% to the rear, to fully locked with 50/50 split front and rear.
The 2nd clutch pack on the front axle allows the front prop shaft and crown wheel to come to a full stop when in rear wheel drive mode to save fuel.
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...2ccf88b842.jpg
This diagram was prior to both systems being fully adopted across all models.
The difference with the technology today is how quickly it can respond to open and close when needed, and how it works in conjunction with the individual wheel braking for traction control.
AWD intelligent diesel or non-intelligent petrol?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
one_iota
The 2022 workshop manual describes its operation (as copied and pasted):
That description is just the same as what the D3/D4 has. In fact the wording is almost identical to the D3 workshop manual description for the transfer box.
Does not explain how iAWD is different.
When iAWD was first marketed they definitely described it as being different to the normal permanent all wheel drive - even pointing out that it was different between the petrol and diesel model Defenders.
This is how it is described for the new Range Rover:
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...11c28c274c.jpg
For the new RRS, similar description but they also note the use of a clutch pack to disconnect the front driveline.
My guess - the documentation for the Defender has not caught up but they are now fitting the same system used in the new Range Rover and RRS, which is a different set up to what the new Defender (and its predecessor the D3/D4) originally came with.
AWD intelligent diesel or non-intelligent petrol?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
one_iota
The documentation I copied is suspiciously out of date. Whilst it refers to the 22 Defenders most of the illustrations are those of the D3/D4.
So?
I guess we always knew the new Defender was the replacement for the D3/D4 that we should have always had. [emoji41]
That manual sounds dodgy to me.