Drivetrain Encompasses driveline components such as the torque converter, clutch, transmission, shifter, front and center differentials, driveshaft, rear differential, and axles.

differentials' action during four-wheel burnout? (was: heres another dumb question)

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Old Nov 29, 2005 | 09:54 PM
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WRXakaBooSTi's Avatar
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heres another dumb question

So what goes on with the diffs, wheels, etc when you do a straightline burnout with a wrx? (not sti) i ask this because im driving on basically bald tires in the rain and a near stand still burnout is acutally possible for once... Im confused about the wrx's awd system, supposedly its 50/50 from a stop, then what happens? anyone want to clarify on the wrx's awd mystery to me??

Last edited by WRXakaBooSTi; Nov 29, 2005 at 09:55 PM. Reason: grammer
Old Nov 30, 2005 | 02:02 AM
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As long as all 4 wheels are spinning, your diffs are happy campers.

And it's 'grammar.'
Old Nov 30, 2005 | 10:48 AM
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what happens if jus the front wheels are spinning? or just a front wheel since the front diff is open?
Old Nov 30, 2005 | 04:01 PM
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The center diff prevents that. It's either all 4 spinning, or just a hard launch.
Old Nov 30, 2005 | 06:17 PM
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When i drive here in the snow my rear end kicks out. Anyone know why if its 50/50?
Old Nov 30, 2005 | 09:14 PM
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50/50 does not mean that your front wheels turn as many times as your rear wheels. 50/50 is the way your Subaru splits engine torque, front to rear. Your rear tires may spin 100 times more than your front wheels in the snow to try and gain traction...that's the beauty of AWD.
Old Nov 30, 2005 | 10:44 PM
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hows the system know where to split the torque? how does it detect slippage?
Old Dec 2, 2005 | 02:50 PM
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I believe it has a viscous coupling that works similar to a limited slip differential, that is how it detects the slippage. correct me if I'm wrong though.
Old Dec 2, 2005 | 05:21 PM
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--
0==WW==0
"…axles of evil…" - george w. bush
Old Dec 3, 2005 | 12:24 AM
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Smile ahhh

that's much more clear. thanks
Old Dec 3, 2005 | 11:25 AM
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Thank you very much, Wingless. That's a better description than I had seen! And I couldn't remember where I had seen it. I was hoping someone would post up. Thanks again!
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