If I understand how it works right, rolling backwards in a forward gear (or rolling forwards in reverse) will lock up the sprag because of the gearing difference between the front and rear outputs of the transfercase, but putting it in the right gear and continuing to roll would unlock the sprag and it would continue to over-run like it is supposed to (8% as I heard). I actually learned exactly what it does when that happens in an interesting way. I pulled off the air hoses to the transfercase because one of them was leaking, when I put the new ones back on I swore I had it right but I was wrong. I pulled outside the shop to test the front wheel drive on the snow (which would only work in forward before) and I didn't have any front wheel drive either way... Then I drove it around the building and every about 15 feet when the force finally became enough, it dragged the rear axles a few inches. Luckily I had almost no traction, no weight because of the lack of a bed, and crappy tires or the dragging would have been more dramatic but it just dragged the rear tires. Same thing in reverse... Rolling backwards in a forward gear or forwards in reverse just binds up the transfercase like a normal truck in 4wd going around a tight corner, but it happens on the straight because of the gearing difference, and because the bind is bigger, the transfercase is bigger, the truck is bigger and heavier, the force is bigger and so is the resulting reaction which is hopefully a slide and not a bang but that would depend on your traction, luckily I was on snow with crap tires and no weight. What I did was cause the transfercase sprag to be in the reverse position when I was in a forward gear and the forward position anytime I was in reverse.