erasedhammer
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So a couple days ago I went out for some off roading and came off a small slope at an angle, which caused two wheels to be off the ground (one in rear, one in front). Without brake modulation, The vehicle would not move at all with more throttle.
As far as I know and understand the torsen differential, the wheel with traction should receive 4 times more torque than the spinning wheel.
So theoretically if the wheel off the ground was getting 100 ft lbs of torque, wouldn't the wheel on the ground get 400 ft lbs of torque and the vehicle should move?
So why didn't I move?
The torsen website doesn't mention anything about brake modulation, but is that the only way to keep it from acting like an open diff?
After a small amount of brake pressure I was able to glide right on off the slope, as expected.
Extra info I found:
Looked at wikipedia... found that normal torsens act like open diffs when one wheel is airbourne. Interesting, any one know why that happens and not when both wheels are on a surface?
Also, looks like torsen made a differential that solved that problem, the T2R racemaster? I think I saw one in a 4:1 TBR... I wonder if putting that in a humvee would better its ability to move forward regardless of wheel slippage...(could eliminate the fact that brake modulation is only fighting your engine)?
As far as I know and understand the torsen differential, the wheel with traction should receive 4 times more torque than the spinning wheel.
So theoretically if the wheel off the ground was getting 100 ft lbs of torque, wouldn't the wheel on the ground get 400 ft lbs of torque and the vehicle should move?
So why didn't I move?
The torsen website doesn't mention anything about brake modulation, but is that the only way to keep it from acting like an open diff?
After a small amount of brake pressure I was able to glide right on off the slope, as expected.
Extra info I found:
Looked at wikipedia... found that normal torsens act like open diffs when one wheel is airbourne. Interesting, any one know why that happens and not when both wheels are on a surface?
Also, looks like torsen made a differential that solved that problem, the T2R racemaster? I think I saw one in a 4:1 TBR... I wonder if putting that in a humvee would better its ability to move forward regardless of wheel slippage...(could eliminate the fact that brake modulation is only fighting your engine)?
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