_UnLiMiTeD_
Full Access Member
Well all the other liberty's i test drove had the 4wd part time option only, this renny i bought has a full and part time option. Was this the better quality case out of the two or has it had more problems?
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The select-trac(NV242) t-case you have is able to drive on hard surfaces in 4wd all the time due to having a diff in the t-case,the other t-case offered is the command-trac which you can only use 4wd on loose surfaces to prevent driveline bind and breakage.The select-trac is a weaker t-case then the command-trac but you should be just fine.Well all the other liberty's i test drove had the 4wd part time option only, this renny i bought has a full and part time option. Was this the better quality case out of the two or has it had more problems?
The select-trac(NV242) t-case you have is able to drive on hard surfaces in 4wd all the time due to having a diff in the t-case,the other t-case offered is the command-trac which you can only use 4wd on loose surfaces to prevent driveline bind and breakage.The select-trac is a weaker t-case then the command-trac but you should be just fine.
Jeep(still AMC then) had a t-case with a diff in it since the early '70's with the Quadra-Trac t-case,and has upgraded the Quadra-Trac to the Quadra-drive and Quadra-driveII.This is interesting to me - I was naievly under the impression that domestic vehicles with 'real' 4x4 systems (ie with transfer cases) didn't have the centre diff. I do find it surprising that you can spend $50K+ on a pickup and get a non-centre diff transfer case for example.
So - just out of interesat what larger vehicles / pickups have transfer case options with the centre diff?
I should add - I'm a relative newbie to the USA; coming from the UK where centre-diffs have beem on rangerovers since 1970 and all defenders since '84...That I could get one in a liberty is VERY interesting!!!
So - is the Jeep transfer case (or any of the others you mentioned) electronically controled, or are they still basically manual internals? I.E. - could you get them to work in a vehicle that wasn't factory fitted with one?
If you have the select-trac t-case you have 3 diffs,one is the front axle,2 is the rear axle,and the 3rd is inside the t-case.The center diff in the NV242 t-case is not a "posi" unit,just a regular open diff.I believe they are just manual - I think you can interchange the two transfer cases easily. For clarification too, the Select Trac has all the options of the Command-Trac, plus "AWD"....I have 2 Hi, 4Hi Part Time, 4Hi Full time, Neutral, 4Lo on my selector.
I suppose I am still not understanding. What I am picturing is the rear axle has the diff in it - so each rear wheel can move independantly. As you said, in a turn this is necessary so you don't bind. Like in a car with a locker, you'd wheel hop the rear on a turn.
In a traditional SFA, the front is set up similarly...diff in the middle with a driveshaft to the Transfer case.
So, are you saying that all Jeeps have a front diff, and the reason for the Select Trac transfer case having the diff is not to "seperate" the wheels left to right, but to seperate the front-to-rear?
So, in part-time 4Hi, or 4Lo for that matter, we truly have two wheels driving? That'd be the reason some want a locker?
What I am not understanding then, based on what you said Dave, is that with a center diff setup, it's constantly in 4 wheel. That's not the case with the KJ - you can go into 2wd. Full time 4wd would put you at 48% power to the front, 52% to the rear. So, I would assume the center (transfer case) diff is more of a posi unit? Otherwise, what would be the point? - As soon as one tire slipped, all power would be put to that wheel. There'd be no 4wd advantage.
PaineA few contradictions through this thread, trying to stay with the lead here.
If your in Part-Time 4wd, why would you need to be on a loose surface? Doesn't it grab once it hits the loose surface (on-demand)?confused.gif