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I "accidentally" drove the Disco for about 15 minutes doing as much as 50 mph with the diff locked and the lever on high before realizing it. This happened a couple of weekends ago. Been driving it daily (on-road) eversince and didn't really notice anything different. I guess I have a two-part question regarding this:
1. Did I screw something up? (crossing fingers)
2. I have 46K on the truck and warranty ends at 50K, should I take it to the dealer and have them look at it? With the rate I'm driving, 50K should come around mid-Novemeber.
Thanks in advance.
-glenn
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Mostly in a straight line??
Probably okay....
The reason why it's bad is because as you turn you'll develop wind-up. If you were driving in a straight line, you could probably go all day locked w/o ill effects... but as you turn, each tire has to go at a different rate to get you around the curve. That differing rate on each tire will build up on pavement because the tires aren't slipping. Off-road, it's okay because in sand/dirt/grass/etc, the tires can spin a little on the soft stuff and not create the wind-up stress.
IMHO, YMMV....
-L
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1. no
2. no
FWIW,
peter
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Yes, it was mostly straight forward driving. That sure is nice to hear. Thanks for the quick response Leslie and Peter!
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Well even if you drove in a straight line you can still get wound up due to differences in tire pressure between the front and rear will cause the two axles to spin at different speeds. I did it once myself and drove to work like that with lots of turns. I took it in and had it looked at and they said it was fine. I wouldn't worry about it.
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Wow! We actually posted at the same time Eric! Thanks for the response. This info will sure take away some paranoia whenever I hear every little road bump that I may encounter and think it's my diffs about to fall apart. Although, I'm sure they're a lot tougher than that.
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Ya, and I was hearing and could feel the clicking on some of the tight turns in my parking garage here at work. You should be ok.
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Glenn,
Everyone pretty much covered it, but I wanted to add that according to the owner's manual, the diff-lock light would stay on if you had "wound up" your transmission.
If your light does stay on, the manual recommends driving backwards to try to "unwind" the tranny.
Disclaimer: This is straight from the manual, as I remember it. Correct me if I'm wrong.
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Nope your not wrong that is what I had to do in order to get my light to turn off and the center diff to unlock. It can take a while to do as well. Or you can jack up you rear axle off the ground as I think that should work as well.
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>If your light does stay on, the manual recommends
>driving backwards to try to "unwind"
>the tranny.
all 50 miles, making sure you retrace your route exactly the same way.
or lift the entire truck in the air, and let it unwind like a spring-loaded toy
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Hadn't thought about the psi affecting it that much, but yeah, it 'could'.....
Wouldn't worry about it anyway......
-L
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If it won't unwind by reversing pull onto something soft like the lawn in front of the office and reverse. It comes right out.
...Uh, so I hear.
cheers
-jeff
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