Saw a 23 (I believe) f550 today and it still has the 60 up front. Does the 450 still have it?
CAD's not so bad. Simplifies shit a lot out at the hub end and gets you 90% of the parasitic drag savings because the ring & pinion, driveshaft, and transfer case chain are all sitting still. The losses are in the churning oil so if the only gears spinning are the spiders in the carrier that's a big drag savings. Plus with a synchro in the transfer case you can get shift-on-the-fly engagement. That gets all the front driveline parts up to speed and then there's no clash as the CAD connects. It's really an elegant solution.I think Jeep hit it pretty hard in the early 80s with the XJ but I think the Wagoneers and Chiefs had it before then.
That's just some inbred Jeep/AMC brain fart and Dana met the challenge.
I mean the shafts are still spinning. Here is a genius idea, when winter comes just leave the front end locked in🤣
At least on the SD60 you can just swap out the lockouts and be normal again. All the other systems are bastards and require massive rework.
When I got a new truck I was scared for that same reason, owning 1990's ford's where the stupid 4x4 button never worked.Took them 15-20yr of constant failures in the 90s and 2000s to come up with an electric transfer case that didn't involve praying every time you hit the button.
It was always the motor or encoder that failed even back in the day.I don’t think it’s “the button”(dial, whatever) that fails on shit post, oh, 2010? T-case motor still fails. I
GMT800 button would like to have a word…It was always the motor or encoder that failed even back in the day.
GMT800 button would like to have a word…