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Home > My Freelander 2 > Freelander 2 All Terrain Options - Query |
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Portculislr Member Since: 07 Feb 2015 Location: Winchester Posts: 45 |
We have owned our 2007 FL2 TD4 now for just over a year and are highly delighted with it so far. However, I do have one question for which I would be appreciative of Members comments. In all that time we have hardly touched the various 'All Terrain Options' and have stayed in the basic setting for most of this time (not much need since it is used on tarmac roads in reasonable weather conditions just about all of the time). I did try one or two of the other selection options and have noticed that although the car still drives very well, the pickup is somewhat reduced from that of the basic option. Is this normal, I assume it is because it is now driving 4 wheels instead of just the front two and there is extra drag in the drive system. Any comments please. |
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25th Sep 2015 10:50 am |
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npinks Member Since: 28 Jun 2007 Location: Ls25 Posts: 20090 |
when you are next in the car, out of gear put your foot on the accelerator in normal mode, set it to 2500 rpm
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25th Sep 2015 11:22 am |
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Portculislr Member Since: 07 Feb 2015 Location: Winchester Posts: 45 |
Gentlemen
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25th Sep 2015 2:12 pm |
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pab Member Since: 28 Aug 2012 Location: Now in Mid-Wales Posts: 2007 |
In normal mode the car will still move off from rest in 4wd (unless the steering is turned away from straight ahead, in which case it won't to avoid transmission wind-up). The balance then moves to FWD as the speed increases, but will always revert to 4wd if any slip is detected at the wheels. The brakes are also used to control any wheelspin. It's pretty clever, for a Haldex system. |
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25th Sep 2015 2:23 pm |
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Portculislr Member Since: 07 Feb 2015 Location: Winchester Posts: 45 |
Thanks for helpful description, I wish LR could have put this detail in the handbook since it would be of great help to people when fully engaging the 4WD options to know what the responses should feel like.
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25th Sep 2015 2:41 pm |
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npinks Member Since: 28 Jun 2007 Location: Ls25 Posts: 20090 |
the difference in revs in the test you did, was shown to me by the LRE Instructor, to show the difference in throttle response, GGS you want slow steady power to prevent wheel spinning and in Sand you need power, to keep moving, wheels spinning but staying on the top of the sand and not digging in
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25th Sep 2015 2:56 pm |
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pab Member Since: 28 Aug 2012 Location: Now in Mid-Wales Posts: 2007 |
I am in the fortunate position of not (yet) needing to have a view as my car isn't yet at the kinds of mileages at which I'd start to think about changing the Haldex and diff oils. Some here have changed them, whilst others adopt the if-it-isn't-broke approach. I'm probably in the latter camp, at least until mileage exceeds 100K - then I don't know. Regarding torque split in normal operation, the Topix manual suggests that the Haldex can disengage almost completely to give near-enough full FWD as the speed rises. Theoretically under certain low grip conditions it can also give near to full RWD. At it can do it very quickly - "Even at 0°C, torque transmission is reduced from 300 Nm to Zero within 10 ms", and "Full torque transmission can be achieved in 150 ms". |
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25th Sep 2015 3:42 pm |
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Portculislr Member Since: 07 Feb 2015 Location: Winchester Posts: 45 |
Tried for the first time the Sand mode but on tarmac road, notice that it revved quite freely and very responsively to quite high revs but made no attempt to shift up to higher gear, assuming this is the characteristic of this particular mode |
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25th Sep 2015 5:28 pm |
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littletriple Member Since: 27 Mar 2014 Location: kent Posts: 226 |
I would not use Special Programs on tarmac as transmission wind-up may result. (Landrover's advice) The transmission to the rear wheels seems quite fragile (rear diff, transfer case etc) & prone to premature failures. Wind-up will surely exacerbate this. Not built like a tractor unfortunately. |
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25th Sep 2015 6:51 pm |
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Portculislr Member Since: 07 Feb 2015 Location: Winchester Posts: 45 |
Point well taken, this trial run only lasted a 20-30 secs as it definitely felt out of place on the tarmac, will now be looking for some suitable off-road situation to try it properly. |
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25th Sep 2015 8:42 pm |
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Chris B Member Since: 23 Jul 2008 Location: North Yorkshire Posts: 440 |
I use GGS on Tarmac if there are lots of wet leaves, heavy frost or flooded roads including waterlogged motorways. It preloads the system to engage 4WD more quickly than general mode when needed and I believe it speeds up the sampling rate for grip evaluation by "the system" from 1Hz to 5Hz (tip from LRE instructor).
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26th Sep 2015 5:56 pm |
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Portculislr Member Since: 07 Feb 2015 Location: Winchester Posts: 45 |
Thanks for the tip Chris B, last year was our first winter with the car and unfortunately little or no frost in the area but hoping for some cold and bright sunny winter days this year to try the GGS option out. I did try HDC mode on a very steep gravel track and was pleased to see how well it worked despite the unnerving judder from the ABS system as it controlled the speed downhill |
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27th Sep 2015 9:15 am |
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