Jim, I don't dispute what you say. I just wanted to point out (with this and my earlier post) that there are two vastly different systems that go under the name of limited-slip differentials. To lump them together is not, in my opinion, correct.Whether operated by cams & gears (which some trucks, and even cars, used) or by clutches, they end up operating the same way- attempting to lock both axles together, but allowing some slippage so the vehicle can make tight turns without having a tire skidding. Positraction is GM's brand for it, just as Sur-Grip was Chrysler's.
Jim
All of the car companies (that I am aware of) made a limited-slip differential that was simply a braking clutch that friction locked the right axle to the left axle at all times. Whenever the left axle turned at a different speed than the right axle, the clutch was forced to slip. No cams, no cones, no nothing, just a spring that set the clutch tension.
The power-loc, posi-traction, posi-loc, etc. are a different beast in that they make no attempt to lock the two axles together unless a --driven-- axle is spinning. They do not lock up at all in turns... no matter how tight, or how long you are in the turn. The mechanisms they use are somewhat different, but the similarities far outweigh the differences.
One common feature of the posi differentials is they are automatic, and the spinning wheel has to spin somewhat for the traction wheel to gain traction. The amount the spinning wheel has to spin varies depending on the internal configuration, but it always has to spin some.
The simple limited-slip differential will not always need a wheel to spin in order to give you traction in slippery conditions. I can easily see how it might be thought, by one not familiar with its internal construction, to never slip at all.
I am not arguing that these limited-slip and posi differentials are "lockers" in the sense that they manually hard lock the right axle to the left, but that the simple limited-slip, and the posi differentials are very different from each other.
I agree that it is incorrect to say a deuce has air "lockers" on the front differential. It doesn't. It simply has an air controlled clutch, on the transfer case that engages the open front differential. Nothing more. A better system than the automatic Sprag clutch (in my opinion), but not a locker.
-Chuck
OBTW, I didn't miss your link, I could see no point in following a link that showed me something I already knew.