Your Rangie has front and rear diffs between the axles.
It also has a viscous coupling between the front and rear propshafts.
The diffs between the axles allow the wheels on either side to turn at different speeds.
The viscous coupling allows the front and rear propshafts to turn at different speeds.
This is essential for on road driving (going around corners all wheels travel a different distance and therefore rotate at different speeds).
For normal offroading that setup is fine.
If you wanted to venture into harder terrain where you were likely to get stuck through lifting wheels, then crossaxle difflocks will be your friend.
These work by forcing the left and right wheels on the locked end to rotate at the same speed.
For example a rear difflock will join the rear axles together making the rear wheels turn at the same speed, regardless of lifted wheels, lost traction, etc.
I would think that for your intended use, the standard setup will be OK.



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see the video [ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cJjfudj511U"]YouTube - Failed attempt at bowl climb[/ame]

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