how long can I drive my AWD in FWD mode?
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how long can I drive my AWD in FWD mode?
I am still working on my vibration problem, and came across the FWD connector under the hood. Some research indicates that I can defeat the AWD system by inserting a fuse in there.
Can I drive like this at any speed indefinitely? I need to take a trip in this car on Thursday and want to know if defeating the AWD will have any ill effect.
Thanks
Dale
Can I drive like this at any speed indefinitely? I need to take a trip in this car on Thursday and want to know if defeating the AWD will have any ill effect.
Thanks
Dale
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Ditto. The FWD fuse it not meant for regular driving. It's meant for diagnostic purposes only.Splinter wrote:You'll burn out the Duty C solenoid if its any significant distance (I wouldnt drive more than 30 miles at low speed that way)
1995 Polo Green Subaru SVX (189k miles - 08/2007-Present)Manarius wrote:The Neo-Cons would call me a defeatist. I'd call me a realist. I'm realistically saying that a snowball has better chances in the blazes of hell than democracy has in Iraq.
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Luck of the draw I guess. The Owner's Manual clearly states that it's for diagnostic testing only. However, some people have gone many months or years with the fuse in. I personally wouldn't want to test it because replacing the solenoid is a pita.quicklook wrote:so who is right?
1995 Polo Green Subaru SVX (189k miles - 08/2007-Present)Manarius wrote:The Neo-Cons would call me a defeatist. I'd call me a realist. I'm realistically saying that a snowball has better chances in the blazes of hell than democracy has in Iraq.
It is for diagnostic purposes only.
When the fuse is in, there is no pressure on the rear clutch pack of the tranny (here is where the duty solenoid comes into the picture), which means no output to rear driveshaft.
WHAT THIS MEANS IS WITHOUT PRESSURE, the FRICTION CLUTCH DISKS are rubbing and sliding/slipping as the rear wheels are turning the driveshaft, with slippage instead of contant pressure. This slippage without pressure lockup RUINS the clutch packs REAL quick, resulting in a major teardown of that center diff if you ever want AWD to work again.
Unless you know the center diff is already RUINED, NEVER drive the car with the fuse in, IT DOES DAMAGE THE CENTER DIFF CLUTCHES and REAL quick. thanks Anyone whoe drives around with the fuse in is stupid......ie do you drive around with the parking brake set on too, or would you drive the car around without oil in it..etc etc .>>>>
When the fuse is in, there is no pressure on the rear clutch pack of the tranny (here is where the duty solenoid comes into the picture), which means no output to rear driveshaft.
WHAT THIS MEANS IS WITHOUT PRESSURE, the FRICTION CLUTCH DISKS are rubbing and sliding/slipping as the rear wheels are turning the driveshaft, with slippage instead of contant pressure. This slippage without pressure lockup RUINS the clutch packs REAL quick, resulting in a major teardown of that center diff if you ever want AWD to work again.
Unless you know the center diff is already RUINED, NEVER drive the car with the fuse in, IT DOES DAMAGE THE CENTER DIFF CLUTCHES and REAL quick. thanks Anyone whoe drives around with the fuse in is stupid......ie do you drive around with the parking brake set on too, or would you drive the car around without oil in it..etc etc .>>>>

91 Legacy Sport Sedan 4eat
91crx si 165k
91 Civic RT4WD manual trans 168k
91crx Si 40.5k
85 BRAT Gl 140
97 SVX 74k
91crx si 165k
91 Civic RT4WD manual trans 168k
91crx Si 40.5k
85 BRAT Gl 140
97 SVX 74k
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hey subyluvr2212, have you ever torn down the center diff assembly? please answer........subyluvr2212 wrote:Yes, it will wear out the Duty C solenoid prematurely, but it will not destroy the clutch packs. I know people who have run, and continue to run, the FWD fuse for years.
here.:
http://new.photos.yahoo.com/bheinen/alb ... 8903#page1
if you have, then i "might" believe your statement here.
seee picts first.
91 Legacy Sport Sedan 4eat
91crx si 165k
91 Civic RT4WD manual trans 168k
91crx Si 40.5k
85 BRAT Gl 140
97 SVX 74k
91crx si 165k
91 Civic RT4WD manual trans 168k
91crx Si 40.5k
85 BRAT Gl 140
97 SVX 74k
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I don't know, I bought the car with a bad tranny (to repair), and when we tore it apart, the Duty Solenoid was not working at that time. Anyways, it has been repaired with new clutch pack and a good duty solenoid and is like brand new now.
91 Legacy Sport Sedan 4eat
91crx si 165k
91 Civic RT4WD manual trans 168k
91crx Si 40.5k
85 BRAT Gl 140
97 SVX 74k
91crx si 165k
91 Civic RT4WD manual trans 168k
91crx Si 40.5k
85 BRAT Gl 140
97 SVX 74k
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the only reason I had done it was, I was told diffs were already crap, and basically was told it was a crap shoot. It never failed me, but was told it could, fortunately never went on me. So I had to go with it, I think it went for 20K after that and no idea what the new owner of the car is doing with itBheinen74 wrote:It is for diagnostic purposes only.
When the fuse is in, there is no pressure on the rear clutch pack of the tranny (here is where the duty solenoid comes into the picture), which means no output to rear driveshaft.
WHAT THIS MEANS IS WITHOUT PRESSURE, the FRICTION CLUTCH DISKS are rubbing and sliding/slipping as the rear wheels are turning the driveshaft, with slippage instead of contant pressure. This slippage without pressure lockup RUINS the clutch packs REAL quick, resulting in a major teardown of that center diff if you ever want AWD to work again.
Unless you know the center diff is already RUINED, NEVER drive the car with the fuse in, IT DOES DAMAGE THE CENTER DIFF CLUTCHES and REAL quick. thanks Anyone whoe drives around with the fuse in is stupid......ie do you drive around with the parking brake set on too, or would you drive the car around without oil in it..etc etc .>>>>
91 Lsi 180k RIP(3-19-06) Sold for $120
93 L 134ish, Bring on the Snow Baby
93 L 134ish, Bring on the Snow Baby
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Okay, so maybe the tires were not rotated on this transmission, and the clutch packs got cooked. Then, someone told them about the FWD fuse trick, and they put it in the car to stop the torque bind, and burned out the Duty C solenoid...Bheinen74 wrote:I don't know, I bought the car with a bad tranny (to repair), and when we tore it apart, the Duty Solenoid was not working at that time. Anyways, it has been repaired with new clutch pack and a good duty solenoid and is like brand new now.
That is the infamous FWD Fuse socket. If you want AWD you want that fuse socket to be empty.shemoves wrote:I think I know what fuse you are talking about. Says 'FWD' on it, passenger side, near fire wall, correct? If so, what should it look like if I want it to be AWD?
no FWD fuse = awd fun

94 legacy wagon - ej22T awd
99 legacy wagon - ej22 awd
99 legacy wagon - ej22 awd
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Without getting into too much detail, the automatic AWD system does really "transfer power from the wheels that slip to the wheels that grip."
Do you have a 4EAT shemoves? If so, next time it's raining outside, take off hard from a stoplight. Power-braking it would be even better. Pay attention to what happens at the instant your car takes off. You should feel the front wheels slip for a blink of an eye, that's it being in 90/10 mode. But when the AWD senses that the front wheels are spinning, it will start sending more power to the back wheels, up to an even 50/50 split.
It actually does this a lot, even in the dry. You will just notice it more in the wet.
Do you have a 4EAT shemoves? If so, next time it's raining outside, take off hard from a stoplight. Power-braking it would be even better. Pay attention to what happens at the instant your car takes off. You should feel the front wheels slip for a blink of an eye, that's it being in 90/10 mode. But when the AWD senses that the front wheels are spinning, it will start sending more power to the back wheels, up to an even 50/50 split.
It actually does this a lot, even in the dry. You will just notice it more in the wet.
*cough cough ahem*
the duty c failed in mine and I ended up stuck in front wheel drive by default.
I ran with it like that for 65000 kms with no ill effect.
If your tyres are all the same size then movement between the plates in the clutch pack will be minimal ( unless you indulge in a lot of wheel spin)
I removed the trans extension housing and replaced duty c and its valve body and measured the drive and driven plates-reassembled it all and its worked fine since.
ECU monitors front and rear shaft speed via vss1 and vss2 and constantly compares them to each other. Should one differ too much from the other the ecu changes the duty c duty cycle in an effort to match the shaft speeds effectively controlling distribution of drive. ECU also monitors TPS voltage and varies duty c duty cycle i.e. idle 90/10 split - foot flat 50/50 split. The futher the foot goes down, the more drive goes to the rear.
You can hear the duty c solenoid buzzing from the case if you set igntion to run (engine off), place trans in drive and progressively press the gas pedal.
Mine failed due to fine metal particle build up sticking to the iron core of the soleniod and binding it up. The 4eat has a large magnet in the sump to collect ferrous metals. This became saturated with metal in mine so the metal circulated to the other magnets in the trans these being SOLENOIDS. When they are energized they suck this crap in and hold it resulting in eventual failure (clean that sump mag once in while!!)
Did ALOT of research on this one before I fixed it.
Back in my box now.
Gary
the duty c failed in mine and I ended up stuck in front wheel drive by default.
I ran with it like that for 65000 kms with no ill effect.
If your tyres are all the same size then movement between the plates in the clutch pack will be minimal ( unless you indulge in a lot of wheel spin)
I removed the trans extension housing and replaced duty c and its valve body and measured the drive and driven plates-reassembled it all and its worked fine since.
ECU monitors front and rear shaft speed via vss1 and vss2 and constantly compares them to each other. Should one differ too much from the other the ecu changes the duty c duty cycle in an effort to match the shaft speeds effectively controlling distribution of drive. ECU also monitors TPS voltage and varies duty c duty cycle i.e. idle 90/10 split - foot flat 50/50 split. The futher the foot goes down, the more drive goes to the rear.
You can hear the duty c solenoid buzzing from the case if you set igntion to run (engine off), place trans in drive and progressively press the gas pedal.
Mine failed due to fine metal particle build up sticking to the iron core of the soleniod and binding it up. The 4eat has a large magnet in the sump to collect ferrous metals. This became saturated with metal in mine so the metal circulated to the other magnets in the trans these being SOLENOIDS. When they are energized they suck this crap in and hold it resulting in eventual failure (clean that sump mag once in while!!)
Did ALOT of research on this one before I fixed it.
Back in my box now.
Gary