« Reply #9 on: February 18, 2012, 02:49:21 PM »
I'll add "mainstream" to the sentence so its still valid. The Eagle came out before Subaru coined the term "all wheel drive." Subaru offered part time four wheel drive in 1974 but did not come out with full time "All wheel drive" until 1986. The AMC Eagle called it "Full time 4WD" but did not offer any other mode in 1980, making it the first mainstream all wheel drive car before there was such a thing as all wheel drive. Who cares? Point is that they added the 2WD mode as an after thought to boost sales. It was well engineered to be fine without it.
The Borg Warner 1339 transfer case actually made a Jeep full size truck and a CJ7 full time four wheel drive in 1973 through 1979. Only AMC offered that unit and it was bizarre. I don't call them all wheel drive because they had solid front axles that do not perform any where near as well as an AMC Eagle's CV shafts and independent front suspension. A "Quadratrac" CJ7 will have slightly less fuel mileage and more front axle wear than a CJ7 with a normal Dana20 and disconnecting front hubs. I refer to that as full time 4WD and the Eagle as AWD because thats the precise modern meaning of those terms, even if it took a few decades to iron out what means what.
The term "Full-time 4WD" in a "Selec-trac" Cherokee is completely different than the "Full-time 4WD" advertised with the Eagle. In a Cherokee the solid axle Ujoints create a surge in the wheel when you're in four wheel drive. It causes resistance and considerable undue wear, even on wet pavement. That also causes a drop in fuel mileage. In a Grand Cherokee the system is better but there is still turning resistance. Many Grand Cherokee owners swap their Full time NP249 transfer case for the 242 and they notice a very tiny difference in fuel mileage. The Eagle, however, has a completely different front end directly equivalent to the modern All Wheel Drive cars available. They have no appreciable difference or undue wear.
The shift lever on the dash sends vacuum to the shift lever at the transfer case. The vacuum enters the transfer case shift lever and then exits from another port to go to the shift fork at the axle disconnect. The "shift on the fly" Eagles eliminated the axle disconnect and used a transfer case shift lever that simply deleted the exit port that would have gone up forward to the axle. It is true than that the shift lever in the dash works both the transfer case and the front axle disconnect.
« Last Edit: February 18, 2012, 02:55:36 PM by captspillane »
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Currently Inspected and Insured as of Jan 2013:
-1985 Eagle Station Wagon 258 T5 Stickshift
-1980 Eagle Station Wagon 258 Auto Fuel-injected with GM TBI
Minor Repairs Underway:
-1982 Eagle SX4 258 T5
-1981 Kammback 2.5L Iron Duke T5
Restoration Efforts Near Completion:
-1982 SX4- 401 NV3550
-1983 SX4- 4.5 MPI NSG370 (6 Speed)
Restoration Efforts Underway:
-1985 SW- 4.0 MPI AX15
-1982 SX4- 4.0 AW4
-1981 SX4- SD33T NV4500 (Turbodiesel 5 speed)
Future Rescue Efforts- '85 Maroon SW, '87 Limited SW, '84 Limited SW, '87 4 door Sedan, '81 2 door Sedan, '88 White SW, '77 4 door Hornet, '74 2 door Hornet, '79 Spirit AMX, '81 Kammback.
RIP- Red '81 SX4, '84 4dr Sedan, '84 SW, '81 SW, '80 Spirit, '83 SW, '83 4dr Sedan