rubicon4wheeler
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Geoff
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2022
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 228
- Reaction score
- 373
- Location
- Sierra Nevada, California
- Vehicle(s)
- 2022 Gladiator Rubicon Diesel
- Occupation
- Safety Supervisor
I was trying to simplify the explanation. You're saying exactly what I was trying to convey. Both wheels on an open diff axle are getting the same torque, but only 1 (the one that's spinning) has any power. The one on ice is absolutely worthless, and because the open diff can't redirect any torque to the wheel with traction, it can't put power to the ground to move the vehicle.You realize that none of that is true? Think about being stuck in 2wd where 1 tire has 0 traction or is hanging in the air. Pre-BLD/traction control what happened? The tire with 0 traction just spun and the other tire did nothing. Was 100% of the power going to the spinning tire? Nope, equal power was going to each rear tire but because there was no resistance there was almost no power being made. There's a reason a dyno is also known as a load cell. Without resistance power simply can't be made. In 2wd is always 100% of the power to the rear axle and 50/50 split. BLD works not by magically rerouting power to the tire with traction but by braking the free spinning wheel and increasing resistance thereby increasing power output... to both wheels equally. In 4wd without an active center dif is always 50% front and 50% rear. With lockers and 4wd you can have 1 tire with traction doing all of the work, but it's doing it with 25% of the power as the other 3 tires are are obviously powered as everything is locked. The hard part for me to wrap my head around in the 1 tire free spinning scenario was how is the engine only producing a few ftlbs of force that it trashed to spin a tire while revving to 6k rpms. The answer is resistance.
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