... 'Cos the lifter bit looks like a pair of spectacles !
Don't we just hope that someone tows an AWD with VC, owned by an irascible lawyer with mechanical savvy !!
Ian, from what you've just said about transmitting "X" amount of torque, THEN slipping (and getting hot and Not Happy...) this would also mean - here comes my twisted logic - that running lower tyre pressures on the front is essential as it keeps the rolling radius smaller than the rears, lessening the load on the front half of the centre diff (?) - so that the VC does'nt need to slip.
Say the front wheels are bogged solid, rears resting on smoooth concrete, then applying oodles of power will mean the VC slips and gets hot and bothered, and the majority of the drive goes to spin the rears....and if you do it often enough and long enough to cook the silicon.... it changes state to 'solid', the VC locks up, and your RR then becomes a "Permanently engaged Part-time 4WD" without the driver realizing it... Till maybe he comments on this forum and folk like Mike RR diagnose it for him !!!
So what is the transfer case 'diff doing during this happy time ? Can't it operate as a normal diff ? that is, supply differing amounts of torque to front/rear shafts as the conditions change...
Still confused, even with the RAVE manual....
If one of the prop shafts was removed from my Classic, would it still drive ? (with a seized VC still in place)
Confused James in Gosnells
The EH, 95 Vogue SE, currently an expensive Garage Decoration... (Already have a "Lawn Sculpture" a.k.a. hovercraft hull.....)



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I'll have to have another fiddle next time I'm in the shed. My thought was that the outer hub of the centre diff that engages the larger spline of the VC, and the inner spline that engages the output shaft, would behave like the two sides of a normal diff. Thus one side linked to the front via the seized VC and the other linked to the back via the output shaft, and the forward extension of the output shaft locks the rear to the VC.
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