ovrszd said:
For those of you that insist on running in 4x4 all the time, here's my challenge to you. Engage your 4x4 on your lawn, turn your front tires halfway to the steering lock, drive forward until you have completed half a circle. Stop, lower your loader bucket (if so equipped), pick the front tires up until they are off the ground. Notice how they will "spin" as soon as you start lifting weight off them??? That's the torque and twist of axles, driveshafts, gears, etc., that is stored in your front drive system from turning in 4x4. Does that not bother you?? Then continue to drive around in 4x4.
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Another easy example of this torque is to engage 4x4 on a gravel driveway, turn the front wheels to the lock either direction, drive forward and complete a full circle turn around. Notice how the front tires are scratching and clawing at the gravel??? That is happening every time you turn around in 4x4 regardless of what ground type you are on.
First, the two portions of your "challenge" post, that I have quoted, are mutually exclusive. The first portion, correctly, proposes a buildup of energy by, to put it simply, the rear axle fighting the front axle. The second quoted portion, correctly, proposes THAT energy being released periodicly thru the manuver. ... seems like there's some kindof an equlibrium law in physics and I think that is a good example of it.
So, for no good reason that I can think of, I just went out and took your challenge:
OF COURSE I did not perform your experiment on paving nor rock slabs. My soil is bullet-proof clay to clay-loam ... scarifiers bounce off it ... it's a desert here. I turned a circle at half lock, then I turned a few circles at half lock, then I turned a half circle at full lock, the several at full lock ... each time using the bucket to check for axle/drive train "unwinding" ... DID NOT HAPPEN! Did the same experiment with my '80 Dodge Ramcharger with 33x12.5 tires (jacking up after each trial) .... NO UNWINDING !
I'm wondering if your tractor and little jeep have fatigued axles and/or drivetrains. That is a possibility, by simple metalurgy.
So my question is ... if you're not on pavement (concrete, asphalt, soil cement, etc) nor raw rock, where's the APPRECIABLE wear that would lead to a repair that is out of the "norm"

I propose that there is no evidence that such "increased" "measurable" wear exists when a tractor is driven in 4WD all the time on dirt, weather needed or not.
Cheers!
Cheers!