S JEEPN
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Steve
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2026
- Threads
- 3
- Messages
- 175
- Reaction score
- 180
- Location
- San Diego County
- Vehicle(s)
- 2024 Gladiator Mojave
- Occupation
- Road construction and maintenance supervisor
That is interesting It is just my opinion from my limited experience offroad and my understanding of differential, axle and drivetrain components I have only ever engaged a selectable locker for slick mud or when i am going to have a tire either in the air or with so little force pushing down it breaks loose and does not produce forward progress. I would not hesitate to momentarily lock a rear, front or both diffs if a tire spins to continue movement and then unlock it after getting past. I rarely run street tire pressure offroad since i try to avoid using momentum to traverse trails unless it is the only option and would be concerned with the lowered pressure there would not be enough tire slippage to prevent something acting as the fuse in the system. As long as tires are lowered to appropriate inflation levels for conditions an unlocked rear differential will allow the tires to turn at different speeds side to side allowing tighter turns without having to induce slippage to prevent the differential binding or having excessive forces on the carrier, axles etc.Having the rear axle locked helps tremendously in loose sand, especially when I need the full articulation of the front wheels to navigate tight turns on desert trails. I get really leery about steering out to full lock using 4x4 on hairpins and switchbacks, so the rear locker only is a perfect solution.
In the dunes a locked rear axle could be beneficial in 2WD high as long as you have the tires, adequate power, and the single axle and other components can handle taking all the force as opposed to having it divided among both axles the reason they have it disconnect at such a low speed from the factory may be due to the concern of shock load breaking things even in 4wd.
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