My apologies. I must have mistaken one of your later posts I replied to as the original post.No, the tires being run on Rubi Gladiator was in the original post.
Sahara was on 3 peak AT’s
I thought this to be true . Figured the lsd portion was probably underwhelming.No, but you can buy a vehicle with locking diffs that is LSD when unlocked, the Power Wagon. But I wasn’t very impressed with the LSD performance on mine, at least not with 4H and mud tires in the snow.
I watched the video . It's about using the rear locker in 4h not 2h . Which in my truck worked as the video described .That is what the entire video is about...
for sure.Don’t all Jeeps have brake lock? Even my Maverick and old Tacoma have this. It’s pretty common. It’s great as an anchor point but not as good as power transfer.
What tires do you have? Tires are more important than ANYTHING else when it comes to snow performance.Hi, so far not real impressed with the Rubi in snow conditions. I deal with ice and hardpack and deep snow daily, all on road. I don't really need the locker as I'm a good enough driver in snow not to get into a position where it's needed.
Just not a confident feel driving this rig in snow. I've added weight to the bed and run Blizzaks but I am wondering if the models with an LSD would be better for the type of snow driving I do?
I'm sure the Rubi is great Off-Road but that's not me so feeling like I picked the wrong version here.
OP has Blizzaks. Those are consistently rated among the best snow tires on the market. We have them on my wife's golf and they are definitely awesome.What tires do you have? Tires are more important than ANYTHING else when it comes to snow performance.
MT tires are terrible in the snow. Its not about open tread. Its about sipes. AT tires with the 3 peak rating are better.
Real snow tires are the best. Nokian makes snow tires in Jeep sizes up to 315/70. If yo0u want to stay stock at 285/70, I believe there are a couple of more brands with REAL winter tires.
I'm guessing you have MTs. Because I have Falken ATs and they are very good. I tried to get a set of Nokians for this winter but they were sold out and I was pleasantly surprised by the Falkens.
Well that's crazy. My wife's Volvo has 4 Michelin snows and is a beast. All with open diffs.OP has Blizzaks. Those are consistently rated among the best snow tires on the market. We have them on my wife's golf and they are definitely awesome.
So, it is not a tire issue. OP doesn't like having an open differential in snow.
You are thinking wrong here. The issue as described by the OP isn't getting stuck. Its stability while traveling at normal road speeds in the snow. An open diff is going to allow the most stability precisely because it can't put more torque to one wheel than it can the other. This reduces yawing tendency if the drive wheels have different traction.Open diff in deep snow will just send power to the wheel with least traction, locked or lsd IMO is better in deep snow.