bfloyd4445
Silver Member
Let's stop and think about this a second.
A. Pretty heavy load of rock in the bucket
B. In 2wd it starts spinning. Well what does that tell you? Does it say the rear wheels are off the ground or extremely limited in their weight carrying ?
C. Engages 4wd . . So now all the weight and all the drive requirements are on the 2 front wheels.
D. Now this has happened multiple times where the front end transmission goes out?
E. If this were a hydraulic problem the pressure relief would have kicked off. And that didn't appear to happen that it was the hydraulics. So if the front wheels were sliding or moving and you shift it into 4wd, it would set gear teeth against gear teeth. Was the rear differential lock also depressed at the same time?
Normally I'm always in 4wd before I start lifting a heavy load.
You made a very good point. With the rear w spinning its an open and shut case. I have trashed jeep front axles and diffs by loading up the front axle then dropping into low range like a dummy shifting the entire weight I'm winching onto the front axle wheels cannot turn but engine can something has got to give. AxleHub you hit the nail on this one i believe these incidents were caused by operator error