Chugbug
Silver Member
Question with the fronts off the gound and you spin them do you hear the gears clicking/ticking. This happens in or out of 4wd
In 4WD , if ANY wheel spins , the other 3 stop . If I apply the diff locker
( rears only ofcourse ) then the two rears will sync and it moves on.
Question ; Why does the other drive shaft stop being driven when
the first drive shaft starts to spin a "lost - traction - tire" ?
Thankyou all for your obervations :thumbsup:
I must have been spinning one on each axle![]()
Yeah - The left front and right rear could spin but with no disrespect I highly doubt that only one wheel of the four spin.
I figured it worked as most of you say in 4wd: power sent equally to both front and back so that a front and a rear will spin when stuck. That would make one believe that the tractors have a "locking center differential," just as 4wd trucks have (different from AWD in some suvs that proportion power front to rear). BUT, I know that with trucks with a locking center diff (that sends equal rotation to both front and rear, same as these tractors) you can not have different size tires or different gear ratios, front to rear.
How can tractors, then, have such drastically different tire sizes, front and rear, if their 4wd system sends equal power to both ends.
I don't see how these tractors can really have 4wd (power sent equally front to rear) with different size tires at both ends.
I figured it worked as most of you say in 4wd: power sent equally to both front and back so that a front and a rear will spin when stuck. That would make one believe that the tractors have a "locking center differential," just as 4wd trucks have (different from AWD in some suvs that proportion power front to rear). BUT, I know that with trucks with a locking center diff (that sends equal rotation to both front and rear, same as these tractors) you can not have different size tires or different gear ratios, front to rear.
How can tractors, then, have such drastically different tire sizes, front and rear, if their 4wd system sends equal power to both ends.
I don't see how these tractors can really have 4wd (power sent equally front to rear) with different size tires at both ends.
What you're calling a "center differential" is known as a "power divider". Yes, it does the same job front to back as a differential does side to side, just a different name to help keep them separate in our minds I guess. Not many 4WD vehicles have power dividers. They don' t have "locked power dividers" as you suggest, they simply aren't there. Front and rear drive line are both turned the same, all the time, when 4WD is selected. This is called "full time 4 wheel drive" as opposed to "All Wheel Drive". That's why you'll always get one front and one rear wheel spinning (or three wheels spinning) but never only one wheel spinning.
You can put whatever size wheels and tires on a 4WD vehicle you care to if you engineer the difference into the transfer case.
Yes, it could, theoretically. By offering that solution, I can tell you understand what I was saying (afraid I wasn't explaining it well). I started to offer that caveat.I am not a mechanic, but couldn't that be accomplished by using different ratios in the front and rear differentials?