Raspy
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2006
- Messages
- 1,636
- Location
- Smith Valley, Nevada
- Tractor
- NH TC29DA, F250 Tremor, Jeep Rubicon
How is it unequal torque with lockers?
This is a great thread
Thanks
Joel
With a "locker" locked, there is no differential action. So both wheels must turn at the same speed all the time.
Now imagine driving up onto a rock with one rear wheel, in a two wheel drive pickup. A rock big enough that the other rear wheel is off the ground.
With an open diff you can't move because the wheel off the ground just spins in the air. Equal torque, unequal speed.
With a locked diff, both wheels must turn at the same speed. So you drive off with unequal torque to the two wheels. The wheel on the rock does all the work while the other one hangs in the air.
The same is true while driving down the road with a diff locked. As you turn, the wheels try to rotate at different speeds and one begins to slip. If one has less traction, like on ice, the other will keep putting power to the road. This is why we have "Limited Slip" differentials. So the wheels can rotate at different speeds, without severe binding on dry pavement, but still apply some power to the wheel with the most traction when needed. A LS diff might not get you off a rock as in the example above, but it will definitely help in mud and snow conditions. On ice it's questionable. Sometimes it might be better to spin one wheel and not both. Spinning one wheel, sometimes, allows you to stay on the road and not just slide sideways into the ditch. In those conditions, even a LS can lock up and cause a spinout. If the LS is "aggressive" with its locking, it will also lead to faster tire wear. But the benefits of LS greatly outweigh the drawbacks. There are many types of LS diffs that range from very little torque biasing to practically locked all the time. Some act like ratchets, and will allow one wheel to rotate faster on the outside of a curve, but neither one can rotate slower under power. My favorite is the Gleason Torson. Through sort of a reverse worm gear mechanism, it will differentiate, but not rev up the wheel with least traction. Some simply have clutches behind the spider gears that resist differentiation under load. One simple design simply replaces the spider gears with dog clutches that engage whenever power is applied, but release when coasting (a terrible design for driveability, but very simple and easy to retrofit). The list goes on and on.