December 16, 2011

G-Professional a step closer

Factory photo of a G-Professional
For almost a year, Mercedes has been dangling the carrot of a more basic G-Class (aka G-Wagen) for the Australian and New Zealand markets. Talking to Mercedes executives today, it seems the holdup has been adapting ESP to the G-Professional, and fitting a passenger airbag. These problems are now apparently sorted. Mercedes says it has to bring the wagon in at under $100,000 in Australia, which would put the New Zealand price north of $120,000.

Here's an earlier item on the G-Class. And have a look at this.

Good info on next Range Rover

The UK magazine Autocar has just published some good information on the next Range Rover here. It's worth a read even if most of us will never be able to afford one.

December 13, 2011

Diff locks: is back then front back to front?

Came in on the tail of a conversation the other day about differential locks, when the consensus was you only need one on the rear. I don’t agree; you need them on the front and back. And if you can only fit one, I’d argue, against conventional opinion, that it should be on the front


An ARB demo rig.
I’ve spent almost 15 years with vehicles that have diff locks at both ends and over that time it’s often been the front one that’s done the trick. For example, during the climbout from a muddy hole in the track traction’s often lost because the rear wheels have sunk into goo that’s too deep for a locker to help. It’s the front one that helps the steering wheels help the vehicle out.


The problem with a front locker is its effect on steering. The turning circle suddenly becomes huge. But it’s just a matter of knowing the vehicle and the characteristics of a locked front diff. However, the suppliers of lockers are understandably worried about liability issues. Sets of lockers are always wired so that the front one won’t work unless the rear one has been activated. That’s also the way it is on factory lockers, like those on the Land Cruiser 70 series, or on my Wrangler Rubicon. But if I were building a strictly off-road 4WD and could only afford one locker, it’d be on the front, for sure.

A visitor, A A Brown, left a comment that I've posted here rather than in the comments section because it provides a useful balance to the item above. He writes: "I have read what you have to say about front diff locks and I have to agree with the general thrust of the comment. However, a front locker can bite you badly if you're not quick with the 'off' switch. And it should never, ever be used on road or any high friction surface."

December 12, 2011

The new header photo

Had a couple of compliments for the new heading picture; thanks guys. The unusual perspective was due to an extreme wide-angle lens and the shot was taken a few years ago from a previous-model Jeep Grand Cherokee at the now-closed Extreme 4WD Park near Auckland. I always thought of doing something with the picture one day – now I have!