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awd questions


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breckert
User
breckert profile image

Nov 24, 2008, 7:07 PM

Post #1 of 7 (1415 views)
awd questions Sign In

ok here i am asking another stupid question about awd but i have a 96 bravada with awd with a 35/65 split which is rear biased. on snow covered hills when accelerating hard the whole car will usually slide to the right or left. is this normal and it seems that my right tire will spin more often then my left tire on the front.
any help is much aprecciated.


Jeff Norfolk
Enthusiast
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Nov 24, 2008, 7:11 PM

Post #2 of 7 (1411 views)
Re: awd questions Sign In

Not much experiance with the ice or snow in south Texas but I would say that is fairly normal under hard acceleration up hill in the snow. Just my thought.
Jeff


Jeff Norfolk
Enthusiast
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Nov 24, 2008, 7:13 PM

Post #3 of 7 (1409 views)
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Also if you see my mom and dad walking on the way up that hill in the snow, pick them up. The are far to old to be out in the snow. Thanks
Jeff


Loren Champlain Sr
Veteran / Moderator
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Nov 24, 2008, 7:28 PM

Post #4 of 7 (1407 views)
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Oh, that's what that 'bump' was. Hmmm.
Loren
SW Washington


Tom Greenleaf
Ultimate Carjunky / Moderator
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Nov 24, 2008, 8:48 PM

Post #5 of 7 (1404 views)
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breckert: AWD isn't some cure all for ice and snow - it just helps! More freakin' SUVs find themselves upside down on the side of the road than regular cars out there thinking they are exempt from traction issues.

I have plowed snow since the mid 1960s and am always shocked at folks who will pass by plow trucks because they drive so slowly - note they are still on the road!

All vehicles have FOUR brakes and are equal when you lose it - just remember that! Ice is ice and nothing can do any better than the available traction of tire to surface and sometimes that's near nothing!

Note: There's is static and dynamic friction. When a wheel slips from either stopping or accellerating is has near zero grip (dynamic friction/traction) on the surface hence a 2WD not spinning or skidding has better traction and control then all four spinning or skidding - got it?


T



(This post was edited by Tom Greenleaf on Nov 24, 2008, 8:55 PM)


dmac0923
Enthusiast

Nov 25, 2008, 6:25 AM

Post #6 of 7 (1391 views)
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In Reply To
breckert: AWD isn't some cure all for ice and snow - it just helps! More freakin' SUVs find themselves upside down on the side of the road than regular cars out there thinking they are exempt from traction issues.

I have plowed snow since the mid 1960s and am always shocked at folks who will pass by plow trucks because they drive so slowly - note they are still on the road!

All vehicles have FOUR brakes and are equal when you lose it - just remember that! Ice is ice and nothing can do any better than the available traction of tire to surface and sometimes that's near nothing!

Note: There's is static and dynamic friction. When a wheel slips from either stopping or accellerating is has near zero grip (dynamic friction/traction) on the surface hence a 2WD not spinning or skidding has better traction and control then all four spinning or skidding - got it?


T

Tom is 100% on this... i have a Ford Ranger 4x4 and im one of the few that still go slow in trucks, but yet it amazes me on snow covered roads during rush hour.....the guy in his nice new BMW driving past ya at 50 MPH. sure enough i catch up and pass him again though.......when you see the skids in the snow.....his bumper on the guardrail.......then the BMW.

for the most part 4wd/AWD. is at its best to help you from getting stuck and get going up. Its never intended to be a fail-safe anti-spin out feature so you can rush home when you got stuck late at work.
__________________________________________________
2015 Jeep Grand Cherokee
2002 Ford Ranger
2004 Toyota Corolla
1969 Ford Mustang Mach 1


dmac0923
Enthusiast

Nov 25, 2008, 6:35 AM

Post #7 of 7 (1390 views)
Re: awd questions Sign In

oh and btw back to your original question...... what your experiencing is normal. wheels will spin at different speeds as they try to transfer power between wheels.
__________________________________________________
2015 Jeep Grand Cherokee
2002 Ford Ranger
2004 Toyota Corolla
1969 Ford Mustang Mach 1






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