Forgive me for asking a dumb question, but also on the to-do list for this weekend is to get the Jeep front end off the ground to inspect and check all the steering and suspension bits.
An odd thing that’s occurred recently that I’m not sure is a real problem or just what you get with big tires and limited slip diffs.
When backing into my parking spot at work (on a concrete lot), if I turned the steering to near full lock (either direction), as the Jeep moved, it feels like the steering wheel is being pulled to the full lock position. Also, when I pull out of the spot, if the steering is at near full lock, the front end seems to jump a bit, sort of feels like the outside front tire is loose.
Is this just how a limited slip differential behaves?
Some background, this ’97 TJ has a 4” Rough Country lift and is on 35” x 12” tires (and I recently discovered it’s been re-geared with 4.10 gears).
Expecting that the speedometer would be off due to the larger tires, I used a GPS speedometer cell phone app to check. Rather than finding the Jeep was going faster than the Jeep’s speedometer was showing, it was actually going much slower (going 44mph when the speedometer showed 50mph). So I lifted the rear wheels off the ground, spun the wheel one revolution and counted the drive shaft revs. Sure enough, it’s got 4.10 gears. I checked each diff for a tag showing the ratio, but all there is a metal tag stating to “use gear oil for limited slip”.
An odd thing that’s occurred recently that I’m not sure is a real problem or just what you get with big tires and limited slip diffs.
When backing into my parking spot at work (on a concrete lot), if I turned the steering to near full lock (either direction), as the Jeep moved, it feels like the steering wheel is being pulled to the full lock position. Also, when I pull out of the spot, if the steering is at near full lock, the front end seems to jump a bit, sort of feels like the outside front tire is loose.
Is this just how a limited slip differential behaves?
Some background, this ’97 TJ has a 4” Rough Country lift and is on 35” x 12” tires (and I recently discovered it’s been re-geared with 4.10 gears).
Expecting that the speedometer would be off due to the larger tires, I used a GPS speedometer cell phone app to check. Rather than finding the Jeep was going faster than the Jeep’s speedometer was showing, it was actually going much slower (going 44mph when the speedometer showed 50mph). So I lifted the rear wheels off the ground, spun the wheel one revolution and counted the drive shaft revs. Sure enough, it’s got 4.10 gears. I checked each diff for a tag showing the ratio, but all there is a metal tag stating to “use gear oil for limited slip”.
