On a stock 2006 freightliner Columbia, what wheels turn when power divider is off? Is it just the rear axle?
What wheels are powered when power divider is off?
Discussion in 'Trucks [ Eighteen Wheelers ]' started by Richter, Jun 15, 2013.
Page 1 of 3
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
All of them.
Yes really.
You're not turning on or off the power divider, or engaging or disengaging it. You're locking it/unlocking it. The power divider is always engaged. All four wheel ends have a link to the driveshaft. What you're doing when you "lock" it is forcing the front and rear diffs to turn at the same speed. Now instead of just one wheel spinning on one diff you need one wheel spinning on both diffs to get stuck. -
Rear axle is the main drive. This is why the rear drive tires wear out faster then the fronts. Things change off road and in slippery conditions.
-
Rear, not sure where allen5oh was going?
Hanadarko Thanks this. -
Why do we seem to have this debate once a year or so?
Have you guys never seen a wheel on the front diff spin? I sure have.
edit:
More like 3 months ago:
http://www.thetruckersreport.com/tr...-eighteen-wheelers/207642-axle-interlock.htmlcetanediesel Thanks this. -
On my tractor under normal driving conditions, my right front drive wheel is under power, powder divider locks in the rear axle, now I have the right front and left rear depending on weight transfer. I also have a switch marked traction control when engaged it locks in all 4 positions (or all eight drive tires) lock in.
I trucks I have owned and or driven in the past would give you 1 drive per axle with the power divider locked in, and only a single on the front diff when unlocked.
I dont know all trucks are the same I can only speak about the ones I have seen in the last 4 million miles. -
Correct answer
-
Lol so many different answers...i need to lift up the rear end and throw it in gear to see for myself lol. I do want to switch to a single dif with lockers and not power divider or power to 1 axle, but the truck is not set up that way right now.
-
Power flow to all 4 wheels equally divided among all 4 wheels because of two differentials and a power divider.
-
cetanediesel Thanks this.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 1 of 3