Sine Deviance
New member
Okay... so the weather was really bad here last night and we got about a half foot of snow in a period of about 4 hours. So the roads got ****ty really quick. My 4WD system wasn't working because the axle disconnect vac motor was shot, and I needed it to work, so I climbed under there and reversed the housing so that the shift fork is always in the 'engaged' position. So my 4WD is working again.
Now, we're about to head out of town for Christmas and we're going to W.Va., which if you didn't know, currently has about two feet of snow on the ground with more coming. So we decided to take my Jeep and I'm going to need to keep my shift fork in the engaged position for that trip and maybe another couple weeks, until I can order a Posi-Lok to replace the system.
My question is, if the front driveshaft is always turning in 2WD will it damage the transfer case? I know some trucks made back in the '80s had a problem with the t-case oil pump only working when the input shaft was spinning, and not the output shaft.
Now, we're about to head out of town for Christmas and we're going to W.Va., which if you didn't know, currently has about two feet of snow on the ground with more coming. So we decided to take my Jeep and I'm going to need to keep my shift fork in the engaged position for that trip and maybe another couple weeks, until I can order a Posi-Lok to replace the system.
My question is, if the front driveshaft is always turning in 2WD will it damage the transfer case? I know some trucks made back in the '80s had a problem with the t-case oil pump only working when the input shaft was spinning, and not the output shaft.