Understanding the Polaris 4wd system...
#31
The front diff is locked all the time. When the back wheels slip 1/5 of a turn, it tells the comp to engage the front hubs which enables all 4 wheels to spin. Once traction is regained the front hubs disengaged. Hope this is right and helps.[img]i/expressions/face-icon-small-wink.gif[/img]
I also questions on the "4x4 ADC" mode, but will hold off on that for now.....
Deek
2011 Polaris Sportsman Touring 550 EPS
#32
... But for rock climbing, and technical, slick hard surfaces, or downhill, it only lets the front wheels pull when they are slower than the rear. And sometimes that is too late.. Instead of a steady, even pull, the Polaris system works with the slowest common denominator. If a wheel needs a little extra pull and speed, like an outside wheel, the Polaris system will not deliver, but merely let the wheel "ratchet" ahead of the mean average speed supplied by the one speed driveshaft system. Instead of a more sophisticated system which would "differentiate" speed and power requirements of each wheel....
Deek
2011 Polaris Sportsman 550 Touring EPS
#33
I am a newbie. Do most folks just do trail riding with the Polaris switch in the "4X4" position? So that when they need awd activated it happens as you describe? Or do folks ride around in "2x4" (with the thought to save fuel), then switch into "4x4" when they think they'll need it.
I also questions on the "4x4 ADC" mode, but will hold off on that for now.....
Deek
2011 Polaris Sportsman Touring 550 EPS
I also questions on the "4x4 ADC" mode, but will hold off on that for now.....
Deek
2011 Polaris Sportsman Touring 550 EPS
I only used 2wd mode for those days I like to power slide the rear end around turns on the trail.
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