tjkj2002 wrote:
jason thompson wrote:
tjkj2002 wrote:
jason thompson wrote:
I would like every one who is saying that using 4wd part time ,or 4wd hi or low on a 231, to think for a minute
I have been places where I was getting so much traction that I was smoking 3 wheels and would have been 4 had it been touching to me that is not a "slippery surface"
now under the same conditions I have had to turn going forward and backward at full lock in a TJ with a Detroit in the back and an ARB in the front
nothing broke
There is no reason to put "the fear of god" in to people like this
simple fact is this
do not use 4wd under any condition unless there is 8"+ of snow on the ground or you are off road
If some one has a 242 and does not know the difference between full time and part time then that person should read the little book in the glove box
If you are "smoking" 3 wheels you have zero traction,sorry but that is just common sense there------Wheel spinning,AKA "smoking the tires" = zero traction.
Running in 4hi or 4low at 5mph for maybe 1 mile or so is alot different then running 4hi(not so much 4low since you can't get it that fast) at 75mph for 50+ miles.
smoking as in burning rubber
like a drag car burns rubber
leaving a skid mark on the rocks
tires got so hot the rubber was melting
this is not a lack of traction but rather to much gravity
If you call spinning your tires and leaving black marks "traction" (the complete oppisite actually)I'd can only imagine what you call a "loose" situation

.
simple
dirt and rocks flying from tires
look I know what you are trying to point out and it has NOTHING to do with the point I am trying to make
my point is simple
people think that there transfer case will explode if the get into a "high traction" situation and use any form of part time 4wd
this is simply not true
If it were true than any one who has played in the rocks would have busted a transfer case
or I ,along with thousands of others, would have snapped axles due to them binding from lockers or spools
because it gives the same result as running open diffs and 4wd on dry ground
tires are forced to turn at the same rate and something has to give ,most times that give is the rubber on your tires
Now I also feel that if a person owns a 4wd any thing and does not take the time to learn the proper use of 4wd
remember I offered a 101 corse, gets what ever they get if they use it improperly