Ignore this one, info applies to some transfer cases, not diffs. Silver
The manuals say that certain models need Dexron II (or is it III) in the front diff. There is a view that is because the thinner oil stops the auto hubs engaging by themselves. The Dexron is the Jap Dexron. However it is difficult to see how this would occur
Last edited by Silver; 16th April 2011 at 02:33 PM. Reason: info re thinner oil in diff influencing hubs is wrong. May be correct for transfer cases
I have been asking around town about my problem with the hubs locking up in 2 wheel drive.
could uneven tyres cause this?
I needed two new tyres for rego and put them on the rear of car. (usually put them on the front)
tyres on the same axle are same wear.
could this have an effect??
Nah... shouldn't be the tyres esp if they have the same wear.
If tyre dia caused it then the hubs would lock evry time any vehicle went round a corner
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Nobby (15th April 2011)
Agree 100% but is was an explanation I came across for why some models of GQ diff need dexron - which being auto fluid is 'thinner'. I don't understand it either :-(
The explanation was that the thicker diff oil got things turning in the diff - but I agree it doesn't make sense. If the transfer case isn't sending grunt to the front, the diff just does its own happy thing......
Happily mine is not that kind of diff so once I worked that out I didn't take it any further.
I'll go back and edit my post :-)
aha!!! found the source of my inaccuracy. The dexron is recommended for some transfer cases - and I can see the explanation making sense there. Got my wires crossed, apologies all.