Posted: Sat Oct 06, 2007 10:55 pm
If the fronts are in fact smaller rolling radius than the
back and putting one of my fronts next to a back leads
me to think they are but not by a lot, the front prop
will be turning faster than the back, so in normal driving
the fronts will have a slight braking effect this will try
to drive the rear via the viscus coupling "Wow free
power" but it is only giving back some of the power
it as already stolen from the rear wheels as they push
the front ones faster than they want to go.
If on the other hand a rear wheel spins the rear prop
will speed up and will drive the front's via the viscus
coupling and the fronts will then drive and with any
luck get you out of trouble.
I have driven other 4wd vehicles and worked on quite
a few and if the Bongo Diffs are the same ratio and
the transfer box is 1 to 1 then I cant see how anything
else can happen, unless I am missing something that is.
As for winding up, the viscus coupling will stop that as
long as things are not a mile out, but I have seen it
on older land rovers that did not have a viscus coupling
when driven in 4wd on normal roads and it happens
quit quickly and is noticeable.
I may be wrong in this but cant see how it can work any
other way.
back and putting one of my fronts next to a back leads
me to think they are but not by a lot, the front prop
will be turning faster than the back, so in normal driving
the fronts will have a slight braking effect this will try
to drive the rear via the viscus coupling "Wow free
power" but it is only giving back some of the power
it as already stolen from the rear wheels as they push
the front ones faster than they want to go.
If on the other hand a rear wheel spins the rear prop
will speed up and will drive the front's via the viscus
coupling and the fronts will then drive and with any
luck get you out of trouble.
I have driven other 4wd vehicles and worked on quite
a few and if the Bongo Diffs are the same ratio and
the transfer box is 1 to 1 then I cant see how anything
else can happen, unless I am missing something that is.
As for winding up, the viscus coupling will stop that as
long as things are not a mile out, but I have seen it
on older land rovers that did not have a viscus coupling
when driven in 4wd on normal roads and it happens
quit quickly and is noticeable.
I may be wrong in this but cant see how it can work any
other way.