Finding technical information is tough. Most articles talk about what it does, not how it does it or what the hard parts are.
Here is an interesting article about the
10 speed power flow and seems to imply that 1st will be no lower than what we are used to (although the article IS 5 years old). I read another article, which I cant find now but will link when I do, that said 1-3rd gears will be much lower than what we are used to. The "6 under driven gears" tells me they will be "low range" capable.
This
article seems to imply that the torque differential magic happens in the rear axle.
"The main components of the new AWD system, developed in conjunction with supplier partner JTEKT, are located in the rear axle that is produced at Ford’s Sterling Axle Plant in Sterling Heights, MI."
Also some good information (like actual statistics) that explain why we are getting AWD in the Transit (not specifically). Demand is over the top.
Does anyone remember when pickup trucks weren't luxury vehicles, when they weren't daily drivers, the times, they do change.....
Low range transfer cases are a thing of the past. Ford calls it Trail Control now,
https://social.ford.com/en_US/story...50-raptor-trail-control-system-explained.html