Four-wheel drive
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Four-wheel drive
Sport utility vehicle | Crossover SUV
The
Jeep Wrangler is a 4WD vehicle with a transfer case to select low
range or high range 4WD.
The
Lamborghini Murciélago is a 4WD/AWD that powers the front via a VCU if the
rear slips.
The AWD VW Golf
is a 4WD/AWD that powers the rear via a multi-plate clutch if the front slips.
The
Mercedes-Benz M-Class is a 4WD/AWD that powers all wheels evenly
(continuously) via a plain
differential and uses
traction control to recover from wheel spin.
The HMMWV is a 4WD/AWD that powers all wheels evenly (continuously) via a plain
(but manually lockable) center differential, oddly with Torsen differentials for both front and rear.
A
Subaru Impreza
rally car
uses 4WD for traction on loose dirt.
Four-wheel drive, 4WD, 4x4 ("four by four"), all
wheel drive, and AWD are terms used to describe a four-wheeled
vehicle with a drivetrain that allows all four wheels to receive power from the
engine simultaneously. While many people think exclusively of off-road
vehicles, powering all four wheels provides better control on slick ice and is
an important part of
rally racing
on mostly-paved roads.
Four-wheel drive (4WD or 4x4 for short) was the original term, often used to
describe truck-like vehicles that required the driver to manually switch between
a two wheel drive mode for streets and a four-wheel drive mode for low traction conditions such as ice, mud, or loose gravel. The "all wheel drive"
term (AWD for short) was invented to distinguish vehicles that are capable of
driving all four wheels on normal roads without causing poor control and
excessive tire and drivetrain wear. The AWD term is now being used to market
vehicles which do not continuously drive all four wheels, but instead switch
from two wheel drive to four-wheel drive automatically as needed. The terms are
thus quite vague in modern usage, with AWD being used to describe vehicles with
a wide variety of very different drivetrains.
The buyer must be wary. It is common for identical drivetrain systems to be
marketed under different names for upmarket and downmarket branding, and also
common for very different drivetrain systems to be marketed under the same name
for brand uniformity. For example, both Quattro and 4motion can mean either an
automatically engaging system with a Haldex clutch or a continuously operating
system with a Torsen
differential.
Design
When powering two wheels simultaneously, something must be done to allow the
wheels to rotate at different speeds as the vehicle goes around curves. When
driving all four wheels, the problem is much worse. A design that fails to
account for this will cause the vehicle to handle poorly on turns, fighting the
driver as the tires slip and skid from the mismatched speeds.
A
differential allows one input shaft to drive two output shafts with different
speeds. The differential distributes torque (angular force) evenly, while
distributing angular velocity (turning speed) such that the average for the two output
shafts is equal to that of the input shaft. Each powered axle requires a
differential to distribute power between the left and right sides. If all four
wheels are to be driven, a third differential can be used to distribute power
between the front and rear axles.
Such a design would handle very well. It distributes power evenly and
smoothly, making it unlikely to start slipping. Once it does slip though,
recovery will be difficult. Suppose that the left front wheel (of a design that
drives all four wheels) slips. Because of the way a differential works, the
slipping wheel will spin twice as fast as desired while the wheel on the other
side stops moving. (the average speed remains unchanged, and neither wheel gets
any torque) Since this example is a vehicle that drives all four wheels, a
similar problem occurs between the front and rear axles via the center
differential. The average speed between front and rear will not change, torque
will be matched, torque goes to zero, speed at the rear goes to zero, and the
speed at the front goes to double what it should be... making the left front
wheel actually turn four times as fast as it should be turning. This
problem can happen in both 2WD and 4WD vehicles, whenever a driven wheel is
placed on a patch of slick ice or raised off the ground. The simplistic design
works acceptably well for a 2WD vehicle. Since a 4WD is twice as likely to have
a driven wheel on an icy patch, the simplistic design is usually considered
unacceptable.
Traction control was invented to solve this problem for 2WD vehicles. When one
wheel spins out of control, the brake can be
automatically applied to that wheel. The torque will then be matched, causing
power to be divided between the pavement (for the non-slipping wheel) and the
brake. This is effective, though it does cause brake wear and a sudden jolt that
can make handling less predictable. By extending traction control to act on all
four wheels, the simple 4WD vehicle design based on three differentials can now
recover from wheel spin. One nice feature of this design, is that it is
traction control, and thus will not work against traction control. This design
is commonly seen on luxury
crossover SUVs.
Another way to solve the problem is to temporarily lock together the
differential's output shafts, usually just for the center differential that
distributes power between front and rear. Recall that a drivetrain without
differentials will fight the driver, causing tire wear and handling problems.
This is of little concern when the wheels are already slipping. One very common
design joins the output shafts together via a multi-plate clutch under computer
control. This design causes a small jolt when it activates, which can disturb
the driver or cause more wheels to lose traction. Another common design uses a
viscous coupling unit. A dilatant fluid inside the viscous coupling unit acts
like a solid when under shear stress caused by high shaft speed differences,
causing the two shafts to become connected. This design suffers from fluid
degradation with age and exponential locking (joining) behavior. It can also waste fuel, because it
requires that there be a slight shaft speed difference under normal driving
conditions (via gearing) to prepare the fluid for operation. Older designs used
manually operated locking devices.
Yet another way to solve the problem is via a
Torsen differential. When a normal differential is replaced with a Torsen
differential, it is possible to drive the output shafts with different amounts
of torque. While this is useless in a zero-torque situation, it will help
greatly when the slippage is not so extreme. As the slipping side begins to spin
out of control, more power is delivered to the other side. A typical Torsen
differential can deliver up to twice as much power to the non-slipping side as
it delivers to the slipping side. Most Audi Quattro cars, notably excluding the
A3 and TT, use a center Torsen differential. For a time, the Volkswagen Passat
4motion shared this design. The HMMWV uses front
and rear Torsen differentials, but only has a normal differential in the center.
Torsen differentials generally work very well, though they are expensive and
heavy.
Many lower-cost vehicles entirely eliminate the center differential. These
vehicles behave as 2WD vehicles under normal conditions. When the drive wheels
begin to slip, one of the locking mechanisms discussed above will join the front
and rear axles. Such systems distribute power unevenly under normal conditions,
and thus do not help prevent loss of traction; they only enable recovery
once traction has been lost. Most minivan 4WD/AWD systems are of this type,
usually with the front wheels powered during normal driving conditions and the
rear wheels served via a viscous coupling unit. Such systems may be described as
having a 95%/5% or 90%/10% power split. Light trucks and SUVs tend to use
multi-plate clutches under computer control, often with 100% of the power going
to the rear axle under normal conditions. Sports cars using this type of
system always drive only the rear under normal conditions. For example,
Lamborghini uses a viscous coupling unit to drive the front, and the Nissan
Skyline GT-R uses a clutch. The Audi TT
normally powers the front, and has a multi-plate clutch to power the rear.
History
transfer case 1986 Mitsubishi Pajero
The first-ever four-wheel drive car (as well as hill-climb racer), the
so-called Spyker 60 HP, was built in
1903 by Dutch brothers Jacobus and Hendrik-Jan Spijker of Amsterdam. Designs for
four-wheel drive in the US, came from the Twyford company of Brookville, PA in
1905. The first US four-wheel drive vehicle was built in 1911 by the Four-Wheel
Drive auto company (FWD) of Wisconsin. FWD would later produce over 20,000 of
its four-wheel drive Model B trucks for the British and American armies during
World War I. It was not until "go-anywhere" vehicles were needed for the
military that four-wheel drive found its place. The Jeep, originally developed
by American Bantam but mass-produced by Willys and Ford, became the best-known
four-wheel drive vehicle in the world during World War II. Willys (since 1950
owner of the Jeep name) introduced the CJ-2A in 1945 as the first
full-production four-wheel drive passenger vehicle. Possibly beaten by the 1941
GAZ-61.
Selection lever
It was in 1948 that the vehicle whose name is synonymous with Four Wheel
Drive in many countries was introduced. The Land Rover appeared at the Amsterdam
Motor Show, originally conceived as a stop-gap product for the struggling Rover
car company, and despite chronic underinvestment succeeded far better than the
passenger cars. Land Rover pioneered the luxury 4WD with the Range Rover in the
70's, which unlike most subsequent offerings from other manufacturers, was
genuinely capable of serious off-road use. Indeed, once a few years of
depreciation had brought its price tag into the realm of the possible, many
Range Rovers enjoy a new life as off-road competition vehicles. One startling
snippet testifying to the durability of Land Rovers was when it was noted on the
occasion of the marque's 50th anniversary in 1998 that over 70% of all Land
Rovers ever built were still in use.
Front Hub 1986 Mitsubishi Pajero
However, it was not until
Jensen applied the Formula Ferguson four-wheel drive system to their 1966 Jensen
FF that the system was used in a production sports car, but with a total of 320
build units this did not sell in appreciable numbers. The first manufacturer to
develop four-wheel drive for road-going cars was Subaru, who introduced the
mass-produced 4WD Leone in 1972. This model eventually became the best-selling
4WD car in the world. Audi introduced the first permanently all-wheel driven
high volume road-going car, the Audi Quattro, in 1980. Audi's chassis engineer,
Jörg Bensinger, had noticed in winter tests in Scandinavia that a vehicle used
by the German Army, the Volkswagen Iltis, could beat
any high performance Audi. He proposed developing a four-wheel drive car, soon
used for
rallying to improve Audi's conservative image, the resulting rally
bred
Audi Quattro was a famous and historically significant Rally car. This
feature was also extended to Audi's production cars and is still available
nowadays.
Some of the earliest
mid-engined four-wheel drive cars were the various road-legal rally cars made
for Group B homologation, such as the Ford RS200 made from 1984-1986. In 1989
niche maker Panther Westwinds created a mid-engined four-wheel drive, the
Panther Solo 2. Today, sophisticated all wheel drive systems are found in many
passenger vehicles and most exotic
sports cars
and supercars.
4WD in road racing
Bugatti created a total of three four-wheel drive racers, the Type 53, in
1932, but the cars were legendary for having poor handling. Ferguson Research
Ltd. built the front-engined P99
Formula
One car that actually won a non-WC race with
Stirling Moss in 1961. In 1969, Team Lotus raced cars in F1 and the Indy 500
that had both turbine-engines and 4WD, as well as the 4WD-Lotus 63 that had the
standard Cosworth-engine. Matra also raced a similar MS84, while Team McLaren tested its design only. All these F1 cars were considered inferior
to their RWD counterparts and the idea was discontinued, even though Lotus tried
repeatedly.
Terminology
Although in the strictest sense, the term "four-wheel drive" refers to a
capability that a vehicle may have, it is also used to denote the entire vehicle
itself. In Australia, vehicles without significant offroad capabilities are
often referred to as All-Wheel Drives (AWD) or SUVs, while those with offroad
capabilities are referred to as "four-wheel drives". This term is sometimes also
used in North America, somewhat interchangeably for
SUVs and pickup
trucks and is sometimes erroneously applied to two-wheel-drive variants of these
vehicles.
The term 4x4 (read either four by four or full times four)
is used to denote the total number of wheels on a vehicle and the number
of driven wheels; it is often applied to vehicles equipped with either
full-time or part-time four-wheel-drive. The term 4x4 is common in North
America and is generally used when marketing a new or used vehicle, and is
sometimes applied as badging on a vehicle equipped with four-wheel drive.
Similarly, a 4x2 would be appropriate for most two-wheel-drive vehicles,
although this is rarely used in the USA in practice. In Australia the term is
often used to describe
Utes
that sit very high on their suspension. This is to avoid the confusion that the
vehicle might be a 4x4 because it appears to be otherwise suited to off-road
applications. A
2×4, however, is unambiguously a piece of
lumber.
Large American trucks with dual tires on the rear axles (also called
duallys or duallies) and two driven axles are officially badged as
4x4s, despite having six driven wheels because the 'dual' wheels behave as a
single wheel for traction purposes and are not individually powered. True
6x6 vehicles with
three powered axles such as the famous "Deuce and a Half" truck used by the
U.S. Army
has three axles (two rear, one front), all of them driven. This vehicle is a
true 6x6, as is the Pinzgauer, which is popular with defence forces
around the globe.
Another related term is 4-wheeler (or four-wheeler). This
generally refers to
all-terrain vehicles with four wheels and does not indicate the number of
driven wheels; a "four wheeler" may have two or four-wheel drive.
In the UK, the derogatory nickname "Chelsea tractor"[1]
is sometimes used to describe large privately owned four-wheel drive vehicles.
The term originally applies mostly to
Range Rovers but may also be applied to any similar large four-wheel-drive
vehicle.
Four wheel drives in Australia
There are two main players in the Australian market:
Toyota and Nissan. The
typically more massive American four-wheel drive trucks and
SUVs are generally
not as popular among Australian consumers because they are not well suited to
the
Australian outback. They are often not rugged enough for the harsh conditions,
and with their typically larger size they are too wide to fit on the existing
wheel tracks created by previous cars (so the driver ends up attempting to carve
out his own track). As in other countries, four-wheel drives have become popular
with city-dwelling people, who by and large will never actually drive "off
road". This is commonly referred to as driving a Toorak Tractor.
Many Australian
Utes
are also 4x4. They are more often used by farmers and others who dwell in the
country's remote regions than tradesmen in the cities. Some examples are the
Holden Rodeo and the Toyota Hi-lux.
Unusual four-wheel drive systems
Prompted by a perceived need for a simple, inexpensive all-terrain vehicle
for oil exploration in North Africa, the French motor manufacturer Citroën
developed the 2CV Sahara. Unlike other 4x4 vehicles which use a conventional
transfer case to drive the front and rear axle, the Sahara had two engines,
each independently driving a separate axle, with the rear engine facing
backwards. The two throttles, clutches and gearchange mechanisms could be
linked, so both 12 bhp 425 cc engines could run together, or they could be split
and the car driven solely by either engine. Combined with twin fuel tanks and
twin batteries (which could be set up to run either or both engines), the
redundancy of two separate drive trains meant that they could make it back to
civilization even after major mechanical failures. Only around 700 of these cars
were built, and there are no clear records of how many still exist. Enthusiasts
have built their own "new" Saharas, by rebuilding a 2CV and fitting the modified
engine, gearbox and axle onto a new, strengthened chassis.
BMC experimented with a twin-engined Mini Moke
in the mid-1960s, but never put it into production.
Suzuki Motors introduced the Suzuki Escudo Pikes Peak Edition in 1996. Though actually numbers were never
released, this twin-engined vehicle is believed to weigh less than 2000 pounds
and produce nearly 1000bhp. Each engine is twin-turbo charged 2.0L V6 mated to a
sequential 6-speed manual transmission.
Most recently DaimlerChrysler's
Jeep Division
debuted the twin engine, 670hp
Jeep Hurricane concept at the 2005 North American International Auto Show in
Detroit. Unique to this vehicle is it's "crab crawl" cability, which allows it
to rotate in 360 degrees in place and it's dual Hemi V8s.
See also
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