December 19th, 2011.
To the OP:
Driving your truck up that 20% grade in FWDL without the front hubs engaged is a very poor practice and dangerous to the truck in any case. The system was designed from day one that when in FWD the front hubs are locked, the reasoning being power will then flow equally from the transmission to both the front and rear axles almost equally. Almost none of the FWD's you gents are used to driving are inherently true FWD's that is, intended to be driven on hard surfaced roads in FWD without snow, ice or rain to act as an equalizer, e.g. there must be an ability for either the front or rear wheels to slip (limited) to equalize any difference in tire diameters or other factors. And without true locking differentials, very few FWD's as we know them are FWD's, they are more like two wheel drives X2 as the power will go to whichever wheel slips first.
By comparison, the Unimog was built from day one as a true FWD truck, but in FWD unlocked (eg, differentials unlocked-hubs are always locked) the truck will behave like your FWD's, but when the differentials are locked, all four wheels must slip for any wheel to slip, hence a true FWD. They are not noted for short turning radiuses, and they cannot be driven on the pavement in either FWD or Locked FWD if the surfaces are dry, as the transfer case and axles multiply the engines torque so greatly that something will have to snap. A S404 will in L range-1 (either 2WD or FWD) have the engine turning about 175 RPM to 1 turn of the wheels, if fitted with the auxilliary 4 speed extra gearbox- give 8 gears in low range instead of 2, in L1L the engine turns 368 RPM to one turn of the wheels. With that amount of power applied, even a Unimog can have troubles if foolishly driven. If you want your CUCV to be around very long, drive it like a sane sensible driver, use FWD where needed, otherwise 2WD