YES - and you will have BOTH spinning at the exact same rate - have front end pointing straight too - cause that beast is going straight regardless of the front endI was wondering, if you are in 2wd and your dive wheel starts to slip, will the DIF lock, lock the rear wheels together to drive both rear wheels?
Good answer. I posted just before your answer came in. I would not have bothered if I had read your post. You gave a very complete answer.YES - and you will have BOTH spinning at the exact same rate - have front end pointing straight too - cause that beast is going straight regardless of the front end
As mentioned - step on the peddle easy, and you might have to give it a little forward or backward movement for the pin to slide in..... but NEVER have the rear spinning!
and once out of the hole - make sure the peddle has popped back up!
Yep that's exactly what Dif lock does. It will lock the two rear wheels together essentially, so that you cant have one tire slipping while the other is unable to move. As others have said however, you should never stomp on the dif lock with the tires spinning. Imagine a flywheel with a hole in it spinning, and then as it is spinning you jam a rod through that hole, much like jamming a stick through the spokes of a bicycle tire. There is a lot of energy in that fly wheel spinning, and if you insert a rod at that point you risk causing damage. It is the same idea behind easing into the pto engagement and disengagement.I was wondering, if you are in 2wd and your dive wheel starts to slip, will the DIF lock, lock the rear wheels together to drive both rear wheels?
Now Flip ....... bad boy!!!! YOU know skeets has waited 6 months for his toy .....er..... machine and you gonna have him break it and then see how long it gets fixed???? Skeets will go bonkers waiting !MASH on it Skeets and hope for the best. if it pukes, it's under warranty, let the dealer fix it. tell them you never read your owners manual concerning proper engagement of the rear locking differential, 'cause you don't read operators manuals, you just wing it and hope for a good outcome...
And see if the warrant it........
With me, that all depends on which axle I lock not that I lock either very often but I can lock the rear and still steer thought it's more of a crab steer. Locking the front results in no steering and I can lock both is need be, though I never have.And be sure it releases when you finished needing it. Your tractor steering wheel becomes only something to hang on to, it will not steer you tractor with the differential locked.
No, I am saying the odds of hitting the hole are slim and none sitting still .....but a slight movement is needed, like maybe moving forward or reverse a foot as the peddle is lowered.Are you guys that are saying not to move ever actually using it? How do you get the pins to magically line up while sitting still?
Which one is the dive wheel? I know that on WWII submarines there was a wheel for the dive planes fore and aft and wheeled air valves to flood or pump up the ballast tanks.I was wondering, if you are in 2wd and your dive wheel starts to slip, will the DIF lock, lock the rear wheels together to drive both rear wheels?
Yes I use it here and there when needed. I think the issue is you're not understanding the quite simple point we are making. No one is saying to engage diff and not move at all and it just magically pops in. We are saying to simply come off the acceleration pedal, don't have a tire actively spinning while you smash down the diff lock pedal. Just basic common sense stuff. You don't want one tire out there spinning, or you actively laying onto the treddle peddle trying to go forward then stomping down on the diff peddle.Are you guys that are saying not to move ever actually using it? How do you get the pins to magically line up while sitting still?
OK, you got me!Which one is the dive wheel? I know that on WWII submarines there was a wheel for the dive planes fore and aft and wheeled air valves to flood or pump up the ballast tanks.
You all are dancing around the Maypole. The diff lock will not likely line up when the wheels are not moving. However sifting the diff lock with the wheels moving at a high rate of speed may result in damage. So....... choose the wheel speed that is just right! Moving but at a slow rpm so the pin can line up and slip into place. Once the pin is in then you can wind it up and spin the ...ell out of the tractor.
If the diff does not disengage you will know the first time you turn the wheel.