Heath_h49008
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So we all hate getting stuck, and lockers are wonderful, but 3 would add up to $1500 plus installation which in most cases would require pulling the axle.
But we do know that an open differential can deliver even torque if the side that spins has the brakes applied.
So we would need a speed sensor on both sides of the axle, and some way to modulate brake pressure side to side if the speed of one side exceeds the other by "x" amount. So a simple processor, two sensors, and a way of generating brake fluid pressure and sending it in a controlled manner to one side or the other is all we need.
The sensors could read off the wheel studs by drilling through the backing plate, or adding something to generate a signal on the hub... we have room to play with however we rigged it. The processor would be a scratch build with drivers for the ABS/Traction Control module. These are getting more common in the scrap yards, and as long as you paired it for one axle instead of trying to manage a whole vehicle stability system, the programming would be simple.
Honestly, with the right manufacturing behind it, it could be built cheap with one fluid line in, two out and power to run it. Oh, and you could add ABS at the same time with a software change if you sourced the right module.
I'm just throwing the idea out there in case anyone has any thoughts on how it could be done.
But we do know that an open differential can deliver even torque if the side that spins has the brakes applied.
So we would need a speed sensor on both sides of the axle, and some way to modulate brake pressure side to side if the speed of one side exceeds the other by "x" amount. So a simple processor, two sensors, and a way of generating brake fluid pressure and sending it in a controlled manner to one side or the other is all we need.
The sensors could read off the wheel studs by drilling through the backing plate, or adding something to generate a signal on the hub... we have room to play with however we rigged it. The processor would be a scratch build with drivers for the ABS/Traction Control module. These are getting more common in the scrap yards, and as long as you paired it for one axle instead of trying to manage a whole vehicle stability system, the programming would be simple.
Honestly, with the right manufacturing behind it, it could be built cheap with one fluid line in, two out and power to run it. Oh, and you could add ABS at the same time with a software change if you sourced the right module.
I'm just throwing the idea out there in case anyone has any thoughts on how it could be done.