Dog Hauler
Active Member
- Joined
- Nov 5, 2018
- Messages
- 118
- Reaction score
- 68
- Points
- 28
I just returned from a 700 mile trip, much of which was in some pretty nasty weather with lots of snow and not much in the way of snow plowing by Utah authorities. I switched bewteen4WD auto and 4WD high as conditions warranted. While I certainly had to slow down as things deteriorated, sometimes all the way down to 30 in a 65 zone, the truck was never skittish and there always seemed to be reasonable grip for the conditions. From time to time, I'd get on the brakes fairly hard to test what traction was out there and was always impressed.
The tires play a big role, of course, but the tires on the truck look to be pretty routine all weather arrangements. They're certainly not full on snows. So, while the tires deserve much credit, the 4WD drive system also deserves kudos. Regardless, the combination was quite impressive.
BTW, my reading of the manual is that the power split between front and rear wheels when in 4WD High is 50/50. Is that true and does power delivery to a given wheel vary depending on which wheels have grip?
The tires play a big role, of course, but the tires on the truck look to be pretty routine all weather arrangements. They're certainly not full on snows. So, while the tires deserve much credit, the 4WD drive system also deserves kudos. Regardless, the combination was quite impressive.
BTW, my reading of the manual is that the power split between front and rear wheels when in 4WD High is 50/50. Is that true and does power delivery to a given wheel vary depending on which wheels have grip?