Hooty481
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Hey just what the questions says. Is it even safe to engage the front end while the truck is in motion? I have never tried but i have wanted to before. what do you all know about it?
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Yes, and no.Unless you have lockout hubs, you can ejgage it at any speed. The ifront and rear diffs are turning at the same speed.
Most of the time that is probably true, but consider this: The rear of the truck has 4 wheels on the ground, and as such has pretty good traction... especially if there is a load. If the front tires are skidding in some slime, and the rear wheels are rolling when you shift, you will grink the gears.I would think disengaging the clutch would allow the case to safely shift. All tires and shafts should be close with no engine torque involved. That is how I shift mine anyway, prefer rolling with load load to stationary, thanks for the interesting thread.
OK.I think somebody should post an image from the the TM that shows how the front axle engagement in these transfers operates.
That would be quite illuminating.
I forgot to consider the lack of common sense required to determine that all wheel ends are turning at the same speed before engagement.Yes, and no.
If all wheels have traction with the ground, then it is safe to shift into AWD at any speed.
If the rear wheels are spinning due to lack of traction, and the front wheels are rolling along the ground, you will grind the gears in the transfer case if you shift it into AWD.
If the front wheels are skidding due to lack of traction, and the rear wheels are driving along the ground, you will grind the gears in the transfer case if you shift into AWD.
And, if you have lockout hubs, and they are locked out it is never safe to shift the transfer case while in motion.
The only time I will shift while in motion is when I KNOW that I have traction on all wheels, and I am expecting to soon need AWD. Times like when I am driving from a gravel road into a muddy rutted up section of the road, or from a gravel road into a stream (ford)... All other times I stop first.
-Chuck
YOU ought to see what happens in the above case to a power divider. just listen for the BANG when the rear rear is spinning at a high rate of speed ( stuck)and the dumb a$$ truck driver locks in the power divider, or the same DATD spinning them self out of the mud with the power divider locked in with rpm close to redline and have the #2 axle grab the hardtop, BANGI forgot to consider the lack of common sense required to determine that all wheel ends are turning at the same speed before engagement.
I'm not quite sure what you are trying to say with that sentence, but common sense doesn't really apply here.I forgot to consider the lack of common sense required to determine that all wheel ends are turning at the same speed before engagement.
The only vehicle where I have gotten caught, wishing I was in AWD, with the front wheels stopped is a pickup truck... an empty pickup truck... which balances out to about the same relative axle weights. The rear wheels were indeed being driven, but the front wheels skidded to a stop in the snow from the drag of the cold differential oil... and very quickly I might add.My front axle scales in at 6400 pounds with my old white dog and myself in the cab or 3200 pounds per tire. To equal that on the rear tires I would have to be 8000 pounds overweight. I would think the front tires would be rolling the same as the rear. That being said I have pushed the front end turning in snow or even wet pavement, when taking off from a stop under power and trying to turn tight at the same time. I doubt the fronts are going to be sliding much without drive to the rear axles. If they are sliding I would like to think I would recognize that right away. Not saying it cannot happen, but I would like to think that would be pretty obvious. Probably accompanied with axn Oh Sxxx! Thought at the same time, white knuckle death grip on the wheel..... Glen
I'm not quite sure what you are trying to say with that sentence, but common sense doesn't really apply here.
Over the years, there have been a large variety of different schemes used to handle the transfer case function. Some have simple dog clutches and should be shifted only when all wheels are all turning at the same speed, and others have friction or fluid differentials built in, and can be shifted anytime at all.
The OP used extremely good common sense in asking the question. I figure that we owe it to him to give him a complete and correct answer.... Chest thumping is, as always, optional.
-Chuck
That's correct................ I'm guessing that the dog clutch on the M35 TC is pretty forgiving about engaging if the dogs are pointing at each other ...................................
I'm guessing you guys all have air shift, so if the dogs aren't actually engaged when you select AWD, it will pop in as soon as there's a little relative motion between front and rear shafts...........
Very true!Probably worth mentioning that getting out of AWD can sometimes be challenging as well - there can be preload (shaft bind) between front and rear shafts that prevents the clutch releasing. Again, stopping and backing up with wheels on dirt is a big help in this case.
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