No. A4WD mode still runs if you ask for it. What's changes is just that the disconnect does not have a disconnected position so the passenger CV shaft is constantly connected to the intermediate shaft even in 2HI. So the differential is always turning the carrier, and that rotates the front driveshaft. So there are more rotating parts in 2HI and more friction and slightly worse fuel economy than in the former 2HI mode when the passenger CV shaft was free-wheeling.Conner299 wrote:....This upgrade eliminates A4WD? ...
Conner299 wrote:...is this an modification worth doing?
The Roadie wrote:Conner299 wrote:.the passenger CV shaft is constantly connected to the intermediate shaft even in 2HI. So the differential is always turning the carrier, and that rotates the front driveshaft. So there are more rotating parts in 2HI and more friction and slightly worse fuel economy than in the former 2HI mode when the passenger CV shaft was free-wheeling.
KE7WOX wrote:So essentially you're running with the equivalente of the hubs locked?
fishsticks wrote:KE7WOX wrote:So essentially you're running with the equivalente of the hubs locked?
Bingo.
Only if the transfer case is engaged in 4HI or 4LO mode. In 2HI mode, all it does is turn the front differential into a constantly turning open diff, driving the front driveshaft. In the usual disconnected behavior, the wheels can both turn, but the intermediate shaft is not connected to the passenger side CV shaft. Think about how a diff works, and you'll conclude the spider and end gears are the only parts of the diff to rotate, the carrier does not, and neither does the front driveshaft. The intermediate shaft actually turns in REVERSE from the passenger side CV shaft, which is why engaging the splined disconnect, even in A4WD mode, is discouraged. It's being asked to lock two splined gears together that are rotating in OPPOSITE directions.KE7WOX wrote:Wouldn't that cause binding / that jumpy sensation when turning on dry pavement?
Conner299 wrote:Roadie... IYHO, is this an modification worth doing? I looked to see if there were any long term reports on on how rigs were holding up with it, but couldn't find any.
Philberto wrote:whew, finally drivable again! Okay, here's the rundown, and I'll have pics up when I get back later tonight:
1) Outer housing is toast, as is outer bearing. Big surprise there.
2) CV axle is, surprisingly, perfectly fine. Steel vs aluminum = steel wins.
3) Gears and fork look fine, but I have an AWD sleeve on order anyways.
4) inner housing, bearing, seal, washer, all fine.
Also, I didn't have any issues getting either a) the CV axle out or b) the disconnect detached from the pan. For a), there is a circlip holding the axle in the gear assy of the disconnect, and for b), one should simply be able to thread in a slide hammer into all 4 bolt holes that are threaded on that side of the disconnect. The key is to disassemble the disconnect while it's still attached to the car, taking the outer housing out attached to the CV axle, and then remove the inner housing. See ya guys in a few hours.