Thats why they left the centre diff' lock in the first D2's. So they could be dynoed on a 2wd dyno.
But yeh, remove front drive shalf. dont just jack up the front wheels. Or we'll be reading about it in the Darwin awards.![]()
Last edited by Zute; 25th August 2010 at 07:04 PM. Reason: spelling
That was in reference to the D2 and not having a centre diff lock, if you run without CDL on a 2wd dyno and your front wheels of the ground it won't work very wellif you run on a 2wd dyno with front wheels on the ground and front prop in, without CDL you'll ruin your centre diff quick smart
I think it'd be a tad foolish to run with your front wheels happily whizzing around at 100+km/hr as opposed to removing the front shaft....but I am a believer in natural selection
My originating post said...."Any mechanical reason why you can't use a 2WD Dyno by locking the centre diff (LT230) and lifting the front wheels off the deck ?????"
Therefore I don't know where doing it with a D2 and or leaving centre diff unlocked came from??? Anyway seems the answer is removing front prop shaft adds nothing mechanicaly and drive line will be sweet.
Thanks all
It came from the above post and that post I was referring to, not your original post, to put it in lamens terms, you can lock your centre diff and prop the front wheels, but its 1. lazy and 2. a stupid idea having large amounts of rotating mass hanging of the ground spinning like ****, make sense?
For those in Sydney, Unigroup Engineering has one. Sees all sorts of vehicles. Yavuz is an excellent tuner as well.
Pretty much most performance shops have them as Skylines/Evo's/Subarus NEED them. Any shop that didn't want your work I wouldn't worry about.
What are you having done? Anything performance related I'd rather tune it with full load on the whole system. I know it should be the same but...
I did some ringing around today....seems a whole lot of respected 4X4 shops simply prop front wheels with centre locked and don't remove prop shaft........interestingly when I then said I was concerned about the front drive line having no load they imediatley agreed that dropping the shaft was preferable but that would take more time ...blah ...blah.
While I am only after comparative data on some alternative setups and therefore not that interested in actual outputs on a 2wd being out of wack, I have decided to put up with the extra wait time and $ and do it on a 4wd. All the same I would be interested to hear one day why removing the front shaft and not jacking the wheels is a must do?
REMLR 243
2007 Range Rover Sport TDV6
1977 FC 101
1976 Jaguar XJ12C
1973 Haflinger AP700
1971 Jaguar V12 E-Type Series 3 Roadster
1957 Series 1 88"
1957 Series 1 88" Station Wagon
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