Holy Roller
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- Joined
- Oct 5, 2020
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I’d like to address the wife factor. It’s been raised in this thread that 4WD offers an advantage to ones wife. Offering her an edge in marginal situations.
I’ve deliberated this question for a very long time. My conclusion is that it’s not truly a clear cut advantage.
I base this on my long-suffering wife of 31+ years. She’s everything that I’m not. And often vice-versa. That is to say she knows almost nothing about automotive engineering. That is my contribution to the marriage. She knows how to turn the key and go. Not much more beyond that.
1) Driving in 4-Hi or 4-Lo on paved roads is destructive to the front driveline. You can only operate the vehicle consistently in Auto or 2WD modes. The switch can be easily bumped and accidentally engage one of these settings. Or she could intentionally engage them but not understand their consequences.
My wife could care less. She’d drive it until it drops. Then blame me. LOL
Would she even have the presence of mind to engage 4WD if she found herself ‘in the rhubarb’? And even then to turn it off once out?
Odds are my wife wouldn’t.
2) The 4WD driveline is 200 pounds heavier than the 2WD. This weight is born by the front axle. This increased mass generates longer stopping distances. On dry pavement probably only an extra yard or so. But on slippery roads you can expect it to be two or three times that.
10 feet in a winter panic stop is a huge difference in my books. I’d rather give my wife the 2WD advantage of a shorter stop in bad weather than the 4WD advantage of an easier take off.
I’ve deliberated this question for a very long time. My conclusion is that it’s not truly a clear cut advantage.
I base this on my long-suffering wife of 31+ years. She’s everything that I’m not. And often vice-versa. That is to say she knows almost nothing about automotive engineering. That is my contribution to the marriage. She knows how to turn the key and go. Not much more beyond that.
1) Driving in 4-Hi or 4-Lo on paved roads is destructive to the front driveline. You can only operate the vehicle consistently in Auto or 2WD modes. The switch can be easily bumped and accidentally engage one of these settings. Or she could intentionally engage them but not understand their consequences.
My wife could care less. She’d drive it until it drops. Then blame me. LOL
Would she even have the presence of mind to engage 4WD if she found herself ‘in the rhubarb’? And even then to turn it off once out?
Odds are my wife wouldn’t.
2) The 4WD driveline is 200 pounds heavier than the 2WD. This weight is born by the front axle. This increased mass generates longer stopping distances. On dry pavement probably only an extra yard or so. But on slippery roads you can expect it to be two or three times that.
10 feet in a winter panic stop is a huge difference in my books. I’d rather give my wife the 2WD advantage of a shorter stop in bad weather than the 4WD advantage of an easier take off.
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