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Iced over roads- Settings for traveling in such

CDSVT, you’re right, the systems are not connected and it’s not an intuitive principle but think about what the CDL actually does. It makes the front and rear props turn at the same speed and, more pertinently to this discussion, accelerate or decelerate at the same rate.

Think of the props being locked together. If you have no rear brakes at all, just fronts, when you brake the calipers will bite the front discs, slow the front axle and the front prop and the CDL will then slow the rear axle. It’s the same thing, using the CDL automatically makes your braking force 50/50 no matter what the brake bias is.


As always, I’m not an expert but this is my understanding and it seems to make sense. Always willing to learn 🙂

Like I said above, if you’ve got some snow and ice experiment with it
 
It’s the same effect if you fail a hill climb without CDL. You can be on the brakes but can still roll back. Engaging the centre lock (if you have one) will stop this.

Robert Pepper did a good video explaining it here

View: https://youtu.be/QCPlK5CJ9uI?si=AoH26AYlYImFiFJ3
I watched this. I'm not questioning observed behaviors. The behaviors people are attributing to brake bias have nothing to do with brake bias and nothing to do with a connection between braking systems and center differential locks.
 
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CDSVT, you’re right, the systems are not connected and it’s not an intuitive principle but think about what the CDL actually does. It makes the front and rear props turn at the same speed and, more pertinently to this discussion, accelerate or decelerate at the same rate.

Think of the props being locked together. If you have no rear brakes at all, just fronts, when you brake the calipers will bite the front discs, slow the front axle and the front prop and the CDL will then slow the rear axle. It’s the same thing, using the CDL automatically makes your braking force 50/50 no matter what the brake bias is.
We are defining brake bias differently.

I understand what you are saying though. Thank you for the explanations.
 
On a related note, do you guys call inch worms 2.54 cm worms? 🐛
Unless they’re Australian, in which case they call them something mind-bending like “snoggy poggers,” and their version can jump 18 feet (5.4864 meters) and spit an alkaline venom that dissolves flesh off your bones.
 
When you lock the CDL it turns off automatically

I didn't think that was correct but it makes sense that ESC would have to be off. Locking the CDL does illuminate the "ESC Off" light in the telltale.

By locking the CDL the front axle can only lock up if the rear does too this is essentially sending some of the braking performance from the larger front brakes to the rear axle. Because the front axle can't lock as easily the ABS can spend more time in the grab position and less time letting go.. ( all of this happens many times a second )

In older 2wd/4wd systems without ABS/ESC it has always seemed easier to get into a spin/slide when in 4wd. Yes, 4wd will get you moving easier but tap the brakes too hard and everything breaks free at once. I was taught to drive in snow and ice with these systems without using the brakes at all... if possible. That also means no sudden high rpm down shifts.

If locking CDL leaves the ABS functioning to some degree but eliminates ESC (so that I can use the brakes more and plan ahead a little less) when is the ESC Off button designed to be used? I don't think I've ever been able to get it to come on even when triple locked.
 
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