a buddy of mine had the toyota LSD and it was not much better than an open diff...
They aren't very aggressive and don't last very long despite being of robust construction.
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a buddy of mine had the toyota LSD and it was not much better than an open diff...
Easy there Francis, not trying to trigger you... I've had 46 years of experience in his area and set up many ring and pinion with LSD and lockers on jeeps, scout, toy ect.I know the pros and cons of each with the LSD being about obsolete these days....even most of the manufactures put in lockers from factory now because they know the history of the LSDLSD = great. Every diff has pros and cons. You like your locker, fine. But that's not what I asked about in the thread. 2nd best 4wd I had was a bronco with LSD on both axles. It never got stuck. And the Ford LSD (which is 2nd rate quality) lasted 129k in the front and over 100K in the rear. Why? Because I took care of it. If yours didn't last perhaps it's a maintenance problem. Sometimes when you're rolling over certain terrains, one tire has a longer path than the other. LSD will allow the tires to each move at diff speeds and thus not spin under force. Lockers can't do that, ever. Everything is +/- and it's about accepting costs to get the benes you want. I want an LSD. Go find another thread to whine.
I had the Detroit trruetrac in the front of my straight axle 85 truck...it worked very good and easier to turn..There are different types of LSDs some use clutches and others use helical gears. There are now several helical gear limited slips for this application. While there used to only be clutch setups like the Auburn. You can now get an 8" Eaton Truetrac and a 9.5" Nitro Helix. The helical gears will mean no more wearing out clutches and having a weak limited slip.
That's really hard to say. The nature of a LSD means you don't necessarily know for sure when it's helping you, you just find out when it isn't. It also doesn't just "stop working". It starts with a certain amount of "bite", and that fades off over time until it becomes largely ineffective in helping you find traction.How long did that LSD last for you, in miles?
That's really hard to say. The nature of a LSD means you don't necessarily know for sure when it's helping you, you just find out when it isn't. It also doesn't just "stop working". It starts with a certain amount of "bite", and that fades off over time until it becomes largely ineffective in helping you find traction.
I'd say the LSD on my 1993 Hilux was helping in some capacity for a good 15 years or so, but it was definitely fading after 10. On my 1996 Landcruiser, which I got in 2017, the LSD had barely any bite when I got it, and is effectively non-existant at this point.
I don't personally agree that a LSD is "obsolete", but they do seem to be out of fashion. From an engineering perspective, a LSD is great for driving at speed over loose surfaces. It shines in places like down here in Australia, when you're dealing with unsealed roads like gravel, dirt, or mud, especially when you've got washboarding. You wouldn't engage a locker and drive at 60km/h around corners. A locker isn't designed to do that, and it'll force wheel slippage as you turn, which isn't what you want. A LSD on the other hand will take that in its stride, and if you end up in the soft stuff on the edge of the road, or start bouncing over the washboards, it'll be there working away ensuring you've always got power going to both wheels on the axle. A LSD however is NOT ideal for technical 4x4 work, like rock crawling or advanced trails, or working in dry sand. Basically, if you're in low range, a locker is probably better. If you're in high range, a LSD is probably better.
As for why a LSD is less popular now, I think that's simply due to the rise of modern AWD vehicles with traction control. That uses electronics to effectively do what an LSD was doing mechanically. Unsealed road is also becoming less and less common, even here in Australia. In the end, this means that die-hard off-roaders will still tend to favour lockers, while more casual adventurers are increasingly able to do without a LSD due to less unsealed road and the advent of electronic traction control.
I'm going to put a locker in my 80. It'll give me more control. I also expect from time to time I'll find myself slipping, stopping, engaging lockers, and then moving again, when a functioning LSD would have seen me get up something first go without issue. That's the trade-off.
I had a lot of fun in my LN106 Hilux with a rear LSD, tearing along winding gravel roads at 130km/h. A lot of those more familiar roads turned to tarmac bit by bit over a decade ago now. If they were still around though, I wouldn't attempt the same today with an open rear diff, I'd have to take it down a notch.
You have the best photo library!They aren't very aggressive and don't last very long despite being of robust construction.
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If I had to choose between Auburn and Eaton Truetrac, I would choose Auburn.
I have exploded multiple Eaton Truetrac diffs because of 33" tires, wet pavement, and a 4 speed with V8 power. Going around a corner , catch an area of wet pavement from a sprinkler system, inside wheel spins up, locks the LSD, catches traction on dry pavement, and blows up the spiders inside.
They worked well in mud, but not so much if you actually have a wheel off the ground as @Nemesis1207 stated with rock crawling.
I blew up three of them in this half ton 4x4 (about 6200 LB) truck. 69 Chevy K10 w/ 360 bored, ported, polished, about 375 HP.Must be the carrier design.
My trutrac has survived slicks and 700hp and 4900lbs.
I blew up three of them in this half ton 4x4 (about 6200 LB) truck. 69 Chevy K10 w/ 360 bored, ported, polished, about 375 HP.
I went back to Eaton on it and tried to figure out what the deal was and they would never warranty and at that time a Detroit Locker was WAY too much money. but, in hindsight, a Detroit Locker would have prevented all of that.
I have always been hard on rear differentials. I think I'm a 7 rear diff's, two transmissions (one manual, one auto) and two engines.
Do you have an LSD in your 80? I'm thinking about getting one, but don't know what to do for the front. What do you have on each end?There are different types of LSDs some use clutches and others use helical gears. There are now several helical gear limited slips for this application. While there used to only be clutch setups like the Auburn. You can now get an 8" Eaton Truetrac and a 9.5" Nitro Helix. The helical gears will mean no more wearing out clutches and having a weak limited slip.
I don't see a Truetrac application for a Cruiser, front or rear. Where did you get yours? Part number?To your question.
Detroit True-trac for front diff
Auburn Pro series for the rear.
Both in 100k ago and still work.
Both are quiet.
True-trac can use Dino or Sunthetic no friction modifier needed.
Auburn recommends Dino and Ford friction modifier ( mine required 2 bottles to stop juddering from rear when reversing in tight turns).
Do you have an LSD in your 80? I'm thinking about getting one, but don't know what to do for the front. What do you have on each end?