If I can "conjure up" a situation on the first time I ever drove a 4WD truck with its hubs locked in snow, it is clearly a problem that should be watched. What I took away from that crash, I mean lesson, was if the truck's hubs are locked, and it is all slippery out, the truck must stay in 4WD! Even in situations where I would have been just fine in a 2WD vehicle... I had about 20 years of accident free 2WD driving experience in all weather when this happened to me.I'm sure that someone can always conjure up an extreme situation. In your case, you probably should have been in 4WD, plus you were running on a cold soak.
Think for a second, if it is desirable for you to unlock your hubs to improve fuel efficiency, the very reason you are unlocking them is to reduce the friction caused by pumping the oil in the differential. In my F250, the difference between locked hubs 2WD driving and unlocked hubs 2WD driving is 10MPG vs 14MPG. That is about 28%. If my fuel consumption increases by 28% just from spinning the gears and pumping the oil in the differential, that means that there is 28% more power consumed by pushing the extra set of differential gears when in 2WD.
[ OBTW, that mileage test was done during the summer months when I had been using the truck in 4WD to get unstuck on my farm, and forgot to unlock the hubs. I drove the truck on the highway for the rest of the week with locked hubs in 2WD, and was shocked at how quickly I went through a tank of gas. ]
Most of the time an extra 28% drag on one wheel won't matter, but when it is slippery out, that wheel is going to skid to a stop first.
Ever hear of a straw man fallacy?Many manual transmissions won't shift under similar conditions. Does that mean we should not have manuals?
And clearly he is right. You might not feel the pull for all of the gear reduction in your manual steering, or the power assist in your power steering, but there is more friction going on on the wheel that it is pushing all of the gears in the differential vs the wheel that has the unlocked hub... about 28% more friction.The person commenting was stating that there would be pull all the time, under all driving conditions. This is simply not the case.
This idea that Jeep and Dodge build trucks with only one locking hub is certainly news to me. I was just walking the lot at the Ford dealer, and all of his 4WD trucks had two locking hubs on the front. More reason to stay with Ford, I guess.
-Chuck