That's it, nice!Opps, replied to the linked treads above! Anyway, those links are useful. I found this http://www.fordservicecontent.com/Ford_Content/catalog/owner_guides/13f12rq1e.pdf
And printed it up.
Thx for the help!
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That's it, nice!Opps, replied to the linked treads above! Anyway, those links are useful. I found this http://www.fordservicecontent.com/Ford_Content/catalog/owner_guides/13f12rq1e.pdf
And printed it up.
Thx for the help!
I have debated a detroit locker for the rear.
Separately, I have heard that some people have successfully wired the locker directly so that it can engage at any speed.
You can keep it engaged above 25 mph in off road mode even in 2wd. In my experience, a locked rear on a slippery surface like water or ice can spin you off the road. Also, the traction control makes the open different act like a limited slip. When it feels a wheel lose traction, the brake is applied to transfer power to the other wheel. The e- locker is one of my favorite features of the Rappy. My 2 cents.
I have heard that you can wire one of your upfitter switches to the e locker + wire and engage whenever or whatever speed.
There's a bit more to the traction equation than just the differential. For example what tires are you running? I live in Northwest Ohio and rain, snow, and ice are common here. I switched to the Falken AT tires from BFG's and couldn't be happier with their wet performance. My 2 cents.yes you can, but again, i don't want to run around on pavement fully locked, and also i don't want to have to flip a switch to get traction for almost every take off when the road is a bit wet.
There's a bit more to the traction equation than just the differential. For example what tires are you running? I live in Northwest Ohio and rain, snow, and ice are common here. I switched to the Falken AT tires from BFG's and couldn't be happier with their wet performance. My 2 cents.
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How much weight to you have in the bed? The mud terrain tires are definitely a compromise on wet traction. Have you considered changing over to an aggressive all terrain that can handle the mud and snow you most usually encounter as well as have generous sipping for the wet stuff. I agree that you only have one tire on the ground with an open diff but one tire that actually hooks will be miles above a spinning one. Also the addition of weight in the bed could improve traction as well.yes, tires make a lot of difference, but with the e-locker unlocked, you are only using half of the rubber on the ground in the rear...no matter what rubber it is.
the truck has toyo m/t tires, the same i run on my van and on my lifted f250 before this. not the best for traction on wet pavement, but they aren't terrible if you have at least 2 of them pushing, and i like to keep the truck capable for handling mud on construction job sites and heavy snow, as we drive to our colorado house to snowboard, a lot. especially if there is a storm passing through. usually we take the 4x4 van i built, but if it is just me and the wife, we take my truck.
i'm rebuilding the front differential right now, and adding the torsen locker for the front also, because i want both front tires to get power as well in 4x4, even for highway use on snowy roads. (didn't that become standard in '12?)