nf6x
Feral Engineer
- 1,630
- 50
- 48
- Location
- Riverside, CA, USA
When I was driving my M923 around on my property last weekend, I spun the rear wheels quite a bit. At one point I flipped on the front axle engagement switch, and things suddenly got better. So, it seems that my front axle isn't automatically engaging the way it's supposed to in low range.
The M939 P2P program shows that if the front axle switch is still engaging the axle in low range, then the valve that's linked to the transfer range lever must not be actuated. A quick look under the truck showed that the valve arm was just barely moved by the plate on the transfer shift linkage that actuates it.
So, the fix looks obvious and simple: Just readjust the arm on the valve so that it gets actuated properly in low range. The thing is, I'm not sure that I want to fix it. I'm considering mis-adjusting the valve arm even further so that it doesn't deflect at all in low range, and so that it'll be obvious that it was deliberately disabled. Then I'd just engage the front axle manually in either range with the switch on the dashboard, and I'd be able to use low range without engaging the front axle... for example, on the rough-but-paved section of country road that I traverse on the way to/from my property, where low range would work better on the hills but the traction is good enough that I'd rather have the front axle disengaged.
Do you M939-series experts see any problems with deliberately disabling the automatic front axle engagement in low range?
The M939 P2P program shows that if the front axle switch is still engaging the axle in low range, then the valve that's linked to the transfer range lever must not be actuated. A quick look under the truck showed that the valve arm was just barely moved by the plate on the transfer shift linkage that actuates it.
So, the fix looks obvious and simple: Just readjust the arm on the valve so that it gets actuated properly in low range. The thing is, I'm not sure that I want to fix it. I'm considering mis-adjusting the valve arm even further so that it doesn't deflect at all in low range, and so that it'll be obvious that it was deliberately disabled. Then I'd just engage the front axle manually in either range with the switch on the dashboard, and I'd be able to use low range without engaging the front axle... for example, on the rough-but-paved section of country road that I traverse on the way to/from my property, where low range would work better on the hills but the traction is good enough that I'd rather have the front axle disengaged.
Do you M939-series experts see any problems with deliberately disabling the automatic front axle engagement in low range?