Scott Brady
Founder
Glad to see it on some rocks! 12" of ground clearance sounds pretty good with the push of a button.
How does the optional rear locker in these work? I assume it is not driver controlled, so does it still need some wheel spin to engage? Then does it disengage after a preset time or something? Just trying to wrap my head around what's going on in there. I suppose I have the same question about the center diff - wheel spin to engage the lock or is it more of a viscous coupling thing?
Looking forward to your rover comparison write up!
It is a true locker and the engagement depends a lot on the terrain response setting you select. The unit we tested would agressively keep the center locked and almost always keep the rear locked when in rock mode. On the visual display, it has three levels of 'assessment', when affects how long the diff remains locked. They are little bars that make a circle around the lock symbol. The more bars that are highlighted, the greater the 'assessment' and longer it stays engaged. The reality is, it all happens automagically.
The Jeep Grand Cherokee Final Drive II has a similar system, but it is better overall than even the HD LR4. More effective and quicker to respond. The previous generation even had a locker in the front, which also engaged automagically. The traction system could write all kinds of checks the body had no business cashing. Given that, the new GC and the LR4 with the HD are very comparable on the trail. The GC has a better traction system, but the LR4 has a much better suspension, with more articulation.
This shows the 4x4 info screen for the truck we have. If it was the HD version, there would be a rear locker symbol too. You can see the bars that make up the locker pie on the display.
![577813_10151540587698275_1473886115_n.jpg](http://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash3/577813_10151540587698275_1473886115_n.jpg)