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Thoughts on Cruiser Transfer Case and *why*
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Thoughts on Cruiser Transfer Case and *why*
I used to have a ;94 surf. It used a planetry pack transfer case. This meant it was small, compact and didn't drive 2 gearsets all the time. High range drvies through the gearset meaning an efficiency loss. Further there was a synchro on High range so you could upshift on the fly. There was also a synchro on the 4wd coupling.
The cruiser HF2A on the other hand uses an input and output shaft side by side with 2 sets of gears. There are no sychros on any of these gears, so going from low to high range means stopping. It's larger mostly due to packaging as far as I can tell, normalyl a planetry pack is smaller than 2 shafts. Finally, when locked up, there is no driven gears, so less power loss.
So why would a 94 surf come with a more "advanced" transfer case than a 100 series cruiser?
I know everyone's first answer will be "strength", but that's more a function of size and quantity of steel. The auto box is full of plantry packs.
Anyone with insights into Toyota's brain?
Thanx
Paul
The cruiser HF2A on the other hand uses an input and output shaft side by side with 2 sets of gears. There are no sychros on any of these gears, so going from low to high range means stopping. It's larger mostly due to packaging as far as I can tell, normalyl a planetry pack is smaller than 2 shafts. Finally, when locked up, there is no driven gears, so less power loss.
So why would a 94 surf come with a more "advanced" transfer case than a 100 series cruiser?
I know everyone's first answer will be "strength", but that's more a function of size and quantity of steel. The auto box is full of plantry packs.
Anyone with insights into Toyota's brain?
Thanx
Paul
Lexus LX470 - hrrm Winter Tyres
Gone - Cruiser HZJ105 Turbo'd Locked & Lifted
Gone - 3L Surf
Gone - Cruiser HZJ105 Turbo'd Locked & Lifted
Gone - 3L Surf
there is definitely a synchro on high range. you might have the wrong oil, it might be worn out, you might be trying to shift it too fast - there is a lot of rotating mass to sunchronise.
as to the 'why' of it all, as in why does the landcruiser use a constant gear drive, some of the answer is a combination of strength, weight, and vehicle mass centre . there may also be legacy reasons although the operating principles of the newer transfer cases is quite different to the old.
as to the efficiency argument, I don't think there's much in it. The older style with thrust washers on the idler shaft might have generated a bit of heat, but your transfer has all tapered roller bearings, yes there is some sliding contact on the gear teeth but the efficiency of the transfer as a whole would exceed 95% at highway speeds; the final drive is far more likely to swallow power. If you drive a landcruiser, the last thing you worry about is efficiency.
as to the 'why' of it all, as in why does the landcruiser use a constant gear drive, some of the answer is a combination of strength, weight, and vehicle mass centre . there may also be legacy reasons although the operating principles of the newer transfer cases is quite different to the old.
as to the efficiency argument, I don't think there's much in it. The older style with thrust washers on the idler shaft might have generated a bit of heat, but your transfer has all tapered roller bearings, yes there is some sliding contact on the gear teeth but the efficiency of the transfer as a whole would exceed 95% at highway speeds; the final drive is far more likely to swallow power. If you drive a landcruiser, the last thing you worry about is efficiency.
Free air locker to the first 20 callers!
We're talking shifting from low to high range, full time 4x4, not part time.Tapage wrote:I thought the max speed ( allowed by toyota owners manual ) advice 80km/h or lower speed to shift from 2H to 4H ..
Regardless there shouldn't be a speed limit to shift H2 to H4 or vice versa, as long as all the wheels are going the same speed.
Greg G
2000 HDJ105
2000 HDJ105
Ok .. my bad .. I never own a full time Land Cruiser ( I love part time)hdj105 wrote:We're talking shifting from low to high range, full time 4x4, not part time.Tapage wrote:I thought the max speed ( allowed by toyota owners manual ) advice 80km/h or lower speed to shift from 2H to 4H ..
Regardless there shouldn't be a speed limit to shift H2 to H4 or vice versa, as long as all the wheels are going the same speed.
HJ-60 2H-T Intercoled [url=http://4x4panama.com/foros/viewtopic.php?t=2770]Tencha[/url]
HDJ-80 1HD-T Stock so far " Marilu "
Panama
HDJ-80 1HD-T Stock so far " Marilu "
Panama
Full time rocks on wet bitchumen, and towing. Puts the power down far far better IMO.Tapage wrote:Ok .. my bad .. I never own a full time Land Cruiser ( I love part time)hdj105 wrote:We're talking shifting from low to high range, full time 4x4, not part time.Tapage wrote:I thought the max speed ( allowed by toyota owners manual ) advice 80km/h or lower speed to shift from 2H to 4H ..
Regardless there shouldn't be a speed limit to shift H2 to H4 or vice versa, as long as all the wheels are going the same speed.
When I tried it last (a while ago) I shifted to N before trying to upshift range, felt crunchy, assumed no synchro on that, and stopped. I'll retest in a few weeks and post results.
Thanx
Paul
Lexus LX470 - hrrm Winter Tyres
Gone - Cruiser HZJ105 Turbo'd Locked & Lifted
Gone - 3L Surf
Gone - Cruiser HZJ105 Turbo'd Locked & Lifted
Gone - 3L Surf
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