dumbdunce wrote:RaginRover wrote:
Have you priced double lockers fitted ? at the $2.5K for all 4 fitted I believe it is nearly half the price of fitted front and rear - I got the impression that air lockers were around $2k each for front and rear ?
Tom
drive in-drive out 'victim' price for air locker installation on a landcruiser or hilux (about the easiest airlocker installations there are) is around $1700 - $1800 (possibly cheaper) for the first one inclduing wiring and ARB compressor, around $1300 - $1400 for the second one. If you negotiate a decent price for the lockers they can be had for around $1000 each, installations can be arranged for around $150, and they're certainly not beyond being installed by a 3 - 4 banana shade tree mechanic. The cheapest nastiest $20 k-mart compressor is sufficient to run them, with a handful of air fittings and a pressure switch, so it is possible to be twin air locked for slightly less than $2500, but you have to haggle hard and/or know some people.
When we start selling the traction control setup we arnt going to be trying to compete with the ARB setups on price. Ours is basically going to be priced similarly to the ARBs and we will try to sell it on its performance alone.
Now we may start the pricing a few hundred dollars cheaper than a pair of ARBs to get people looking at the product but I really dont think anybody should buy this just because you are going to save a few hundred bucks. Our traction control has benefits that ARBs carnt offer and it is these features that we will sell it on.
Just as a thought - if our traction control worked identically to a set of ARBs in every situation there wouldnt be any contest because our setup is just so much easier on axles and is so much easier to use. So basically our traction control trades a little bit of top end performance for alot more reliability and strength and ease of use.
So what does this mean in terms of which is better at different levels of wheeling. Heres what i think:
On the mild stuff the performance will be identical - the advantage of the ETC is that you can leave it on all the time and it doesnt effect your turning ability.
As the obstacles get harder there will become a point where you will notice that the full lockers start to work better. This wont necessarily mean that something with traction control wont drive an obstacle that a fully locked rig will but the traction controlled rig will definately have more wheelspin. On an abstacle that can be totally crawled with zero momentum the results would be almost identical in all situations. The lockers may have an advantage in certain situations where you want absolutely no wheelspin where the traction control will let a wheel spin a bit and this will push you off line (and you will fall off a rock and diff out for example) And the traction control will have an advantage in situations where the lockers bind the wheels up and they fight each other (like stuff where you need articulation or really sharp or undercut ledges) With the ETC the drive train will load up less (cause there isnt any binding loads) and the rig will crawl more easily.
As the obstacles get harder again the advantage definately swings back to the traction control simply because its just so much easier on axle components. This lets you drive harder without breaking. When we talk about this sort of wheeling the major application of the traction control is in the front axle because the rear axle will generally be able to handle a locker. That being said the Lockless doesent have any lockers at all and there are only a very small number of situations where a rear locker would make it better - and again there isnt an obstacle anywhere that the Lockless hant been able to drive that a fully locked rig has. This strength issue is the reason why Adrian (POS) runs the traction control on his front axle and not a locker. We have talked about it many times whether or not he would be better off with a locker in the front and he has never done it simply because he knows that his front axle just wouldnt be able to handle it. Basically his rig is more capable without a front locker - and if he can sort out a way to keep his rear end from breaking he would be unstoppable (he has now broken both rear toyota 60 series axles - so I think thats 2 front CVs and 2 rear axles he has broken since it was built which really demonstrates how strong his front combo really is). The other example is the climb that the Lockless has driven Tony has broken twice on and has yet to drive it. For me the climb isnt really all that hard (Im not sure if this is how I should describe it cause it took me about 10 goes to get it and I did roll completely over at one point although I was being fairly stupid on that attempt). Its got a tough ledge at the bottom and it is steep and a bit loose and off camber as you go up. For me its just a matter picking a line and holding the throttle flat. For Tony he just basically has trouble breaking the front end becuse its locked -its happned twice now. Im sure he will be able to drive the climb but each time he tries he is really risking breaking his front end. It wouldnt supprise that i would be able to drive up there 10 times without breaking and Tony would probably break 5 times - I dont know he may not ever be able to drive it without breaking. If he had the same front setup as me I dont think he would have any trouble. Now as our tracks become harder and harder this is going to become a greater concern to Tony - trying to drive stuff and trying to keep the front from breaking. For me and Adrian we dont worry about the strength of the front axle - we do break stuff eventually but it happens over a period of time that we can live with. For Tony if he is not carefull he could break a brand new CV every time he goes out.
So who do I think should buy traction control instead of lockers?
- somebody who isnt into the hard core stuff that wants something that is easy to use and gentle on drive train components.
- somebody that carnt get ARBs for their vehicle.
- somebody that has independent front suspension and doesent want to break it.
- somebody that is really into the hardcore stuff and is having strength issues (espesially the front end)
And who do I think should stay with the lockers?
- somebody that doesent run big tyres that doesent really drive that hard.
- somebody that doesent mind fixing broken CVs.
Sam