PyrPatriot
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 27, 2019
- Threads
- 193
- Messages
- 2,668
- Reaction score
- 1,875
- Location
- Kentucky, USA
- Vehicle(s)
- JT Sport S Max Tow; Honda Element
I was told under 50 you could shift the transfer case on the Gladiator (sales guy said that)
My wife's Grand Cherokee is automatic, we never have moved that dial, and my Silverado can be shifted but I generally leave the knob in automatic as well. The traction control gets us where we need to go for the most part.
Our driveway is a pretty good hill, about 120 feet, to get to the road. I was driving my truck in deep snow (I get lazy when it's cold - didn't plow) and noticed that the truck was manipulating the brakes and I made it up the drive without doing a thing.
My Eagle SX4 with the NP129 can be driven on any surface in 4x4 mode so if it's iffy, I shift to 4x4. I have to stop to shift because the vacuum motors not only shift the transfer case but also break and reconnect the front axle on the right - that is not synchronized and can get messy if you shift while moving and one axle is moving a bit faster than the other. Bad, really bad.
So I'm used to vehicles that can be shifted to 4x4 and left there - other than my 95 F250 which you did NOT want to drive on dry pavement in 4x4 mode as things would wind up like an old clock and you'd never get it back out again!
So - this is a very interesting thread - not because I don't know about snow (I've driven through feet of snow with my first Eagle - it was hood deep!) but because this Jeep system will be like a step back in time for me with the transfer case it has.
Heck, I drove my AMX with rear window louvers backwards almost a mile during a blizzard when the 2 lane rural road was blocked by a jack-knifed semi and the only way home otherwise was a road we had passed almost a mile back. That was FUN!
The best vehicle I have ever driven in snow, deep snow, was my Eagle - only time I ever got the Eagle wagon stuck I was goofing around in big drifts and went up onto a drift and felt this sort of - well, uh-oh, and the car settled down onto the floor pan. Scooped under the car and drove out. I think the drift was about 3 feet deep where I drove up onto it.
Manual says best if done under 45mph. You may be able to switch above that.
Sponsored