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4x4 Explained
Introduction to All
Wheel Drive systems - By Eliot Lim
Differential
Locking
This is a core design
issue in all wheel drive technology because these have a profound effect
on the cars' road behavior. Consider the case of the simplest all wheel
drive car with 3 "free" diffs. The car can be rendered immobile if any one
of the four wheels lose traction because basic differentials equalize the
torque output. A simplistic way to look at this is to think that the basic
"free" differential sends power to the axle with the
least grip, so if one wheel loses grip, all the power is
sent there, leaving nothing for the remaining three. In reality, the
differentials are equalizing the power distribution, so everything is
equalized to zero in this case. Remember that a four wheel drive vehicle
has twice as many wheels as a two wheel drive to lose grip and mobility
on. And since four wheel drive vehicles would tend to be used more in bad
conditions, it is quite important to have some form of differential
locking. Every full-time four wheel drive car on the market today has some
form of diff locking. A good way to understand this concept is to trace
the evolution of the very early systems to the state of the
art.
Audi was the first manufacturer to successfully sell
high-performance, permanent four wheel drive with the quattro,
released in Europe in 1981 and in the US in 1983. (The car goes by the
more popular name turbo quattro coupe in the US and more recently,
the Ur Quattro around the world). The cars were very successful in
rallying , winning several world titles and it set the automotive world
ablaze because four wheel drive was never previously associated with ultra
high performance. Even though the 1966 Jensen FF was the first vehicle to
have full time four wheel drive (and also anti lock brakes) the car was a
commercial failure and it was left to Audi to break through the public
consciousness and go into the history books for launching the full time
four wheel drive revolution.
During the 1980s Audi decided to spin
off four wheel drive and the quattro name to its entire range of cars. The
first generation quattros had simple locks for the center and rear diffs,
which locked one or both of them solid (no speed difference) to dig one
out of deep trouble. When the center diff was locked, it meant that one
had to lose grip on one rear and one
front wheel to become immobile. When both the center and rear diffs were
locked, one had to lose both rear wheels and
one front wheel to get stuck. The locks on these Audis
were manually engaged and were quite cumbersome since the driver already
had to worry about shifting and steering in addition to this. Audi found
that many drivers forgot to disengage the locks once they got going
again.
Thus development went in the direction of automatically
locking differentials. First on the scene was the viscous coupling (VC for
short) which used a silicone liquid in a casing designed so that minor
speed differences were allowed between the two axles but increased slip
would lead to a rapid increase in the viscosity of the fluid which would
then lock up the coupling. The viscous coupling was used in two radically
different ways:
Some manufacturers used regular differentials in
conjunction with the VC where the VC functioned as a diff lock that acted
automatically when conditions needed it. The current Mitsubishi Eclipse
GSX and current manual transmission all wheel drive Subarus use this
scheme. The departed BMW 325ix and Toyota Celica turbo all-trac also used
it.
Audi, during the development of the original quattro, also
played with VCs and came up with a completely different way of using a VC.
In this implementation, the VC is used as the center
diff, resulting in a part-time, automatically engaging four wheel drive
system. In this implementation, the car is basically front wheel drive,
with the rear wheels coasting along and minor speed differences absorbed
by the VC when the vehicle was turning. When front wheelspin occurred, the
speed difference would increase to the point where the VC with its viscous
liquid churning would start transferring some of the torque from the front
to the rear wheels and thus the vehicle would become four wheel drive.
Note the difference between this system and the former. The latter is
auto-engaging part time four wheel drive, while the former is full-time
auto-diff-locking four wheel drive.
The part time automatically
engaging system was never put into production by Audi but was instead spun
off to VW, which did put it to market as the syncro system. The
simplicity of this implementation has drawn a very wide range of
manufacturers to use it as well, from all the minivan implementations,
many of the newer SUVs to exotics like the current Porsche 911 turbo and
Carrera 4 and the Lamborghini Diablo VT (these have permanent drive on the
rear wheels, of course). Volvo is a new player in this field and its
latest all wheel drive offerings also use this scheme, with an unusual
cocktail of limited slip devices thrown in, namely a traction control
system at the front and a regular mechanical limited diff in the rear.
Several magazines have found this system to be in need of further
refinement.
Next came the torsen (stands for TORque SENsing)
differential, which was embraced by Audi in its second generation quattro
system. Audi was approached by FF development (owners of the VC patent)
during development of the original quattro back in the late 1970's but the
VC was rejected for reasons that will become clear shortly. The torsen
diff was invented by an American company (Gleason corp.) and had all the
advantages of the VC and none of its disadvantages. It is a fully
mechanical device of worm gears and a worm wheel whose workings are quite
difficult to describe with words and probably beyond the scope of this
article. However, the torsen's characteristics is the issue that is of
interest here. The torsen differential will split torque 50:50 in a
no-slip condition. However, when one axle slips, the torsen diff will send
more torque to the axle with more grip, in other words,
it works in an exactly opposite way to a conventional diff. Torque splits
of up to 80:20 are available, depending on the pitch of the worm gears.
And since it is a completely mechanical device, the locking action is
instantaneous and progressive as opposed to the VC, which has a very
slight lag for the viscous fluid to heat up and suddenly lock. The torque
sensing characteristics of the torsen also allows it to be
proactive in preventing wheel spin rather than reactive, in
correcting a wheel spin situation. The torsen diff is thus "more
sensitive" to slip than the VC. Its locking action is also more
progressive. (Porsche also rejected the VC in the 964 Carrera 4 because
they felt that the VC was too difficult to control and that it had
exponential rather than linear locking characteristics.)
More
importantly, the torsen does not lock or inhibit speed differences under
braking, thus allowing all 4 wheels to rotate independently at their own
speeds when no power is applied. The torsen diff only locks in a power
application situation while the VC locks both during acceleration and
braking. The torsen has a torque sensing characteristic while the VC has a
rotational sensing characteristic.
The VC's rotational sensing
characteristic initially caused lots of problems for the engineers. Anti
lock braking systems rely almost entirely on speed differences between the
4 wheels to detect a locking wheel. Thus, when the transmission tries to
force 4 wheels to rotate at the same speed, it creates serious
difficulties for the ABS system.
The engineers had to use a variety
of hacks to get around this problem. Mitsubishi delayed ABS for a while
for its first generation GSX, then finally decided to make ABS and rear VC
limited slip mutually exclusive options. The VW syncro system simply
disconnected four wheel drive the moment the brake pedal was stepped on
via a secondary clutch. Most other vehicles using this implementation of
VC have a very similar disengage feature. The very successful World Rally
Championship Lancia Delta Integrale even went as far as to apply a little
bit of power (via the engine computer) to reduce the drag of the VC when
the brakes were applied! Some very crude systems used a overrun device
that is conceptually similar to the bicycle crank. This meant that while
four wheel drive was disengaged during braking it was also inoperative
when reverse was engaged!
The easiest hack was to reduce the
effective viscosity of the fluid in the coupling, so that the drag was
reduced. This also meant that the VC's locking effectiveness was reduced,
which is probably quite acceptable for a vehicle intended primarily for
paved roads. The VC's attraction is its simplicity and cheapness, not its
sophistication.
In the late 1980s Porsche and Mercedes were
treading slowly and came out with all wheel drive vehicles of unparalleled
complexity. Mercedes' 4Matic system used the ABS sensors to determine
wheelspin. In the dry, the Benz was a rear wheel drive car. When the wheel
sensors determined that the rear wheels were spinning, a signal was sent
to the computer to start engaging a hydraulically actuated multi plate
clutch to send power to the front wheels. Clutch engagement was
progressively altered by the computer. When the computer determined that
even more traction was needed, a second clutch would start locking the
rear diff. When the brake pedal was pushed, both clutches disengaged
instantly to allow ABS to work without interference.
The Mercedes
4Matic was a part time, automatically engaging four wheel drive system.
The reason given by Mercedes why they went to great pains to design a
part-time four wheel drive was that they did not want to upset their loyal
clientele with a full-time four wheel drive, which because of the driven
front wheels, would "change the traditional feel of a Mercedes". One could
also speculate that they were too proud to use anything less complicated
than Audi, which in the marketplace is considered "lower". In practice,
the 4Matic system worked no better and no worse than the other crop of
full-time four wheel drives, but its cost and complexity made it look bad.
This original 4Matic system has been ditched and the latest 4WD Mercedes
is now a full time system, including the system to be used in the "M"
class SUV. The Nissan Skyline GTR uses a system that is conceptually
similar to the original 4Matic.
Porsche used a similar system of
locking clutches (though they are implemented quite differently) as the
Mercedes in the limited production, state of the art 959, but the center
diff (which is actually just a hydraulic clutch) was engaged at all times
except when parking so that the steering would be easier to turn. Torque
split in the 959 varied with load and conditions. (via the progressive
locking of the clutch). Unlike all other implementations of all wheel
drive, the 959's torque split varied under no slip conditions. i.e. In
every other all wheel drive system, the split is fixed
until slip occurred, after which the various limited slip
devices would begin to alter the split. In the 959, the all wheel drive
computer is fed information from many sources, including the throttle
position, steering angle, g force accelerometers and even the turbo boost
gauge. In a straight line, under maximum acceleration, the system will
send up to 80% of the power (from a normal 40 front/60 rear split) to the
rear wheels, even if all 4 wheels are turning at exactly the same speed.
This was by far the most complex and sophisticated all wheel drive system
ever built.
The 959 was followed by the 964 which was first
introduced in 1989 as the 911 Carerra 4. Porsche claimed that this was an
evolution of the system used in the 959 and is even more advanced.
However, this was a fixed split system like all the others, with computer
controlled clutches acting as limited slip devices. The 964's trump card,
however was that the speed sensors and accelerometers were used with the
computer controlled locking rear differential to cure the 911's natural
tendency to oversteer if the throttle was suddenly lifted off in a turn.
The rear diff would start locking when the computer detected that
oversteer was imminent. A locked rear diff would induce understeer, which
in turn countered the oversteer. Through the use of all wheel drive and
smart differentials, Porsche was able to tame a formerly unruly beast into
a much more docile animal. This, according to their chief engineer was
their main reason for implementing all wheel drive in the 911, as the 911
with its rear biased weight distribution is not in a real need of extra
traction.
In 1993 Porsche updated the 911 with a brand new rear
suspension. Even the rear wheel drive version was tamed and thus the
justification of using a highly complex computer controlled all wheel
drive system disappeared. The four wheel drive version of this 911 (alias
the 993), has a much simpler, lighter and cheaper part time automatically
engaging VC system such as those found in the Golf syncro and most
minivans. However, the smart rear differential that fought the deadly
oversteer was retained to quell any remaining tendency to oversteer. The
new watercooled 911 (aka 996) C4 uses essentially the same system as the
993 C4, but with additional computer controlled stability assistance
tweaks. It is somewhat disappointing to see that Porsche, once the clear
technological leader in this field retaining the viscous coupling in its
latest AWD offering while many other new AWD offerings such as the new VW
Golf 4Motion and 1999 Jeep Grand Cherokee resort to more sophisticated
designs.
Subaru deserves mention here because in the automatic
version of the Legacy and Impreza (including the Outback variants), it
uses a computer controlled system much like those found in the Mercedes
4Matic, automatic Audi A8/V8 and the earlier Porsches. Subaru has been
offering this sophisticated system for a long time in a relatively
inexpensive car. Much more recently other makers have started offering
conceptually similar systems. The Honda CR-V, the 1999 VW Golf 4Motion and
its derivatives such as the Audi TT now use a system that is conceptually
similar.
The Audi A8 (as well as the automatic version of the Audi
V8) also used a computer controlled clutch to lock the center
differential, in a manner similar to the systems just described. The
automatic transmission supplied a ready source of hydraulic pressure to
lock a pack of clutches, so it was tapped. This system represented Audi's
first successful mating of automatic transmission with quattro all wheel
drive. Current quattro models with automatic transmission use a center
torsen differential with the exception of the A8.
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