ISUZUROVER wrote:bad_religion_au wrote:ISUZUROVER wrote:
As Dougal said - no difference to economy. Anyone who says otherwise probably thinks hiclones give better economy too.
i dont' know about this at all. every gear mesh causes drivetrain loss. drivetrain loss = less power making it to the wheels for every litre of fuel burnt.
everything i've ever read about AWD cars states that they have a higher drivetrain loss than RWD counterparts (that AWD HSV, and the Turbo territory spring to mind as cars that are directly comparable to a RWD counterpart).
your not just churning the diff oil, your keeping the whole front drivetrain spinning, from output shaft to stub axle on the CV. something that a part timer ISN'T doing.
OK - how about empirical testing???
Many years ago I had a PT 4x4 (Land Rover) with free wheeling hubs. Whenever I engaged the FWHs - the car felt more sluggish, but that was only for the first few hundred m until everything was re-lubricated.
I did a few fuel economy tests with the FWH free and locked (locked is really equivalent to a full-time 4x4 - maybe 1 bearing less is turning). Economy was consistently low 18s (4 cyl petrol), with no significant difference either way.
Think of it this way - you are still moving the same mass around, which takes the same amount of Work. The ONLY difference is that there are couple of bearings fewer that are turning (and like Dougal said a bit of oil).
In a vacuum it might make a difference, but not the real world.
And this is the key statement.
Take your part time 4wd, and drive it with the hubs in. You are now turning all the same parts as an AWD. What's the diff in acceleration and economy? I'll place a pretty solid bet it's 3/10 of stuff all, and the ppl I know that tried it reported same.
How many part time 4wd cars don't even have free wheeling hubs on many variants? Pajero etc? My surf had the Toyota ADD - it simply split one axle on the front left. This left the planetrys and axles and cv's spinning, and the crown wheel stationary.
The assumption that much changes is pretty vague.
Also - for the less wear argument cause it's not spinning. How many rear diffs / bearings / seals do you hear of being replaced - next to none. Now how many front? Lots. It's cause ball bearing are designed to spin, sitting in one spot - they vibrate, pit the races, unevely wear the seals etc. It's not the lack of lube, it's the stationary vibration. Presto - leaking noisy fornt diff that's "never been really used".
Finally, my AWD 105 is MUCH better for towing and in the wet or on dirt. Puts the power down so much more effectivley when traction is low. I used to have to use real 4wd in the Surf on the bitumen to tow in the rain around Bardon, could move from lights otherwise.
Paul