... When you lock the center diff around town, the bind in even moderate turning is so bad that the vehicle will not turn properly. This is not understeer. This is a vehicle that will effectively only go in a straight line unless you have tires that have so little traction they can spin on dry pavement without any noticeable input to the driver.
This has nothing to do with ABS, non-ABS, or anything else. You cannot drive with a locked transfer case on drive pavement unless the road you are on is virtually straight. I have a hard time believing that this is a debatable point, and racing is not a comparable perspective. Anybody who disagrees should engage the CDL (just drive in low range if you don't have a CDL) in your garage and go to buy some bread. Leave it locked for the entire trip. Feel free to post the results of your experience.
Nay
Horsepucky. And let me put for the record (again) I teach car control for street drivers, I haven't 'raced' competitively since 1997. For S&G I ran locked center just yesterday (AWD hi, CDL on), for the whole day, in chicago. I was testing the handling of my 80 in turns from a stop light and overall feel of the braking and handling (dry pavement, super sticky Blizzack stock size ice tires). Actually it is understeer Nay. At full lock it can be difficult to force tire slip. But I had no full lock in normal city driving yesterday, and mild understeer.
I won't parrallel park, or do some other tight maneuver with my foot to the floor, but certainly for on road driving, I personally like the phenomenal difference in brake feel and proportion, and the more even handling thru turns.
I run locked on pavement all the time, and have done so prior to my 80 with my quattros. Last year, almost my whole trip to Steamboat was with CDL on. And in my spirited climb thru the passes outside of Fort Collins and Rabbit Ears with a gaggle of quattros on mostly dry pavement, I ran the CDL on the whole time. Any other mode would have put my supercharger advantage to shame.
I only advocate the *understanding* of awd chassis dynamics, and have a issue with the unsupported 'unsafe' statements. Lift kits, roof rack over/loads, improper training, bad PM, bad tires, bad brakes, bad driving position, bad driving habits, all have bigger effects on 80 safety in terms of chassis dynamics than the CDL on or off. You can choose to lock it or unlock it based on your driving involvement, your driving comfort zone, or your concerns for accelerated driveline wear. Choosing to advocate no CDL on pavement because it's *unsafe* is buying the marketing.
I go thru this mindset every year at Steamboat Center for Driving Sciences, and at many pavement Driving School venues. It really doesn't bother me much, it's easy to demonstrate. I get involved in these discussions because my passion is awd chassis dynamics, and has been for 15 years. I teach car control at cliinics and track venues. I don't buy hype, I don't buy ABS as safer than understanding and training.
And, I have spots open at Steamboat for anyone that wants to have one of the best times of their lives learning car control in an environment that allows you to regularly exceed the laws of physics without any damage to your vehicle, only ego.
ST
Eventmaster
Gruppe-q Steamboat 2007
www.gruppe-q.com