Thanks guys.
This old chestnut again
Before we start, its important to note that in the same way some Hi-Fi manufacturers refer to "peak" watts in marketing, the true measurable and comparable value should always be RMS Watts, so Haldex refer to "Torque" in marketing terms as "applied torque against a surface", rather than the more generic definition of Torque.
The Haldex unit is a multi plate clutch device, capable of locking together the front (axle) drive and the rear (axle) drive. It is not a differential. Conceptually, it just joins the front half of the propshaft to the rear (propshaft).
1. When engaged, can the Haldex ever change the 50:50 drive (front:rear) to be biased more to the rear?
A: No. The Drive will always be, 100:0 (in the case of Haldex disengaged, FWD), or 50:50 (in the case of Haldex engaged, AWD).
2. Can the Haldex ever cause the rear wheels to turn faster than the front (assuming equal friction surfaces for all tyres)
A: No. Haldex can never make the car into a power-oversteering monster (assuming equal friction surfaces for all tyres)
3. Can the Haldex "send" more than 50% of the torque to the rear?
A: Yes (in Haldex marketing terms) eg: Front tyres are on a skating rink, rear tyres are on grippy tarmac.
In Haldex world, you can't "send" torque. Torque in Haldex speak is what is being transmitted from tyre to ground.
In the skating rink example above, the rear wheels will not be rotating faster than the front (ignoring the cross-axle diff), as the drive front:rear will be 50:50. But as the rears are gripping more than the fronts, then more torque is being transmitted by the rear wheels, than the front, and this will give you movement.
In other driving situations and scenarios, you can set up the car to get all 4 wheels spinning and drifting, and yes, through driving and momentum, you can hang the back of the car out (for a period of time) - but on a dry grippy road, assuming equal traction at all 4 corners, most of the torque will be transmitted by the front tyres before it even thinks of going to the rears.
Thats not to say that the car will always feel like a FWD car. Through careful setting up of the corner, you can utilise the fact that the rears are going to take a shorter path than the fronts (and turning slightly slower than the fronts), and you manually engage the Haldex to be ON, you can force the rears to turn at the same speed as the fronts, and you will "feel" the rears pushing.
So. If you go by the definition that you define torque by what is being transmitted between tyre and ground, then yes, with a Haldex Unit, more torque can be available at the rear tyres than the front, depending on the friction (mu) of the surface.
However, with the Haldex engaged, you can never have more than 50:50 drive (front:rear), and the rear wheels can never (in a straight line, equal mu surfaces) be made to turn faster than the front wheels.
The following video illustrates torque transmitted at the tyres, as seen by Haldex.
Regarding rear tire wear, the reason your rears wore faster than the front is that with Haldex 4, the rears get about 70% in acceleration scenarios. Also the clutch pack can lock up independent of slip, so rear wheel engagement is much higher than on previous versions. My old S3 8P Sportback also wore through rear tires faster than the fronts by about 2mm on average, with even flat wear across the tire. See my post above for more...i have first hand experience with that taking the Golf R to the race track how would you explain that in drags, we were chewing through toyo r888s' (rear tires) at a quicker rate in fact they were being chewed 3x as quick as the front and thats with the stock AWD system, just saying... here is a much more thorough and detailed view of the Golf R audi S3 haldex setup and the quattro set up in longitudinal A4 etc..
have read you, i can assure you'll be interested
Can someone explain the FWD Haldex system to me? - VW GTI MKVI Forum / VW Golf R Forum / VW Golf MKVI Forum / VW GTI Forum - Golfmk6.com
There is some misinformation here.
First, there is always about 15-20% of torque at the rear wheels, it is never 0%, unless the rear is on glaze ice and the front has grip.
Furthermore, up to 100% of torque could be sent rearward if the front axle is on a very slippery surface and the rear isn't.
I have no idea what you are talking about hereThe most important takeaway here is that there is almost ALWAYS slip on the front axle whether the road is wet or dry.
This also happens in cornering, as, [.....].the front wheels take a shorter path than the rear
In that case you can probably answer why all S3 8P's can always power oversteer out of corners?I have owned them all and the Gen 4 and 5 Haldex drive so similarly to the Torsens that it isn't even worth worrying about.
There sure is. Here we go again. This isn't Pistonheads
There will be some drag due to the viscosity of the clutch pack oil, this is where the 10-15% figure that Ulf Herlin talks about comes from. If you have a look at a graph of engagement, it is not proportional at all to the front over the entire rev range, this is simply oil drag, and not driven power.
There is definitely no driven rear with the clutch pack disengaged, otherwise we would not be able to use the 2 wheel rolling road for brake tests at the MoT stations in the UK.
Even in Ulf Herlin's words, "near 100% torque transfer" (he nevers says 100%) - can happen, hypothetically. If your front wheels and no grip (ice rink) - AND the front of the car is suspended off the ground (no weight loading). As soon as the front end of the car is on the ground, with the weight of the front and engine on the wheels, that magical "near 100%" figure disappears. Even accounting for acceleration which lifts the front, you are not going to magically eliminate the weight off the front wheels. Therefore "near 100%" torque transfer to the rear is not possible in reality. Only for marketing purposes.
I have no idea what you are talking about here
In that case you can probably answer why all S3 8P's can always power oversteer out of corners?
This is clutch drag, not engagement. It is not a constant 15%. it is only 15% at a specific rev, tapering to less than 10% at 5000rpm. Look up the engagement graphs for yourself, always better than forum heresay. Once again, if it is engagement, use of the 2 wheel brake test rolling road would be impossible as the car would be trying to jump off the rollers. This does not happen.It is clutch pretensioning, and it means that 15% of the torque is on the rear wheels. The Haldex fully disengages on braking as it is electronically triggered to do so, and there is no reason for it to stay engaged. It does not disengage fully when cruising on a motorway.
Exactly when will I find myself with my front wheels with no weight on them, and rears on grippy tarmac?It is possible in reality, just unlikely. The more important figures are found in the dynamic weight distribution scenarios I mentioned, as this is where AWD is needed most.
These are your words - "The most important takeaway here is that there is almost ALWAYS slip on the front axle whether the road is wet or dry". Demonstrate this in a straight line, with equal high friction surface on all tyres please.There are a variety of factors that cause slip in the front diff, and there is rarely a state in which you are driving where the front is not registering some degree of slip.
I have no idea what you are talking about. I am not a member of PH, and have never posted there. I just occasionally read some of the far fetched scenarios on there.I'm not exactly sure which of the 3 PH stalkers you are, but I do find it amusing that you are now integrating information that I brought up in past threads (that you challenged) on that site and passing it off as information that you always knew and accepted as fact. At least you appear to be learning something.
This is clutch drag, not engagement. It is not a constant 15%. it is only 15% at a specific rev, tapering to less than 10% at 5000rpm. Look up the engagement graphs for yourself, always better than forum heresay. Once again, if it is engagement, use of the 2 wheel brake test rolling road would be impossible as the car would be trying to jump off the rollers. This does not happen.
Additionally - clutch pretensioning only possible on Gen 4 & 5. Ulf wrote that email back in Gen 2 days, before pretensioning. That blows the 15% engagement out of the water.
What exactly is your point? The mechanical ability to do so is there, and this extreme example illustrates the greater concept -- that under slip, more than 50% of torque passes rearward. Do you actually have trouble comprehending this?Exactly when will I find myself with my front wheels with no weight on them, and rears on grippy tarmac?
"Near !00%" torque transfer to the rear is a marketing scenario, not reality.
1. The key word is "almost." Too subtle?These are your words - "The most important takeaway here is that there is almost ALWAYS slip on the front axle whether the road is wet or dry". Demonstrate this in a straight line, with equal high friction surface on all tyres please.
I think you didn't detect the sarcasm of the oversteering S3 scenario. It was a reference to how you found Haldex so similar to Torsen that it wasn't worth bothering with the difference.
I have no idea what you are talking about. I am not a member of PH, and have never posted there. I just occasionally read some of the far fetched scenarios on there.
Then you can provide a link, or document. You must be getting confused with Gen2 Haldex.as the 15% figure has been published by Audi AG
Yes. Especially seeing as Gen 2 Haldex required 15 degrees of wheel slip to couple. "Almost" doesn't cut it.1. The key word is "almost." Too subtle?
One is a full time all wheel drive system, the other is a part time all wheel drive system. Too subtle? Or just difficulty comprehending?2. In my opinion the systems are virtually interchangeable as sold in current Audi products.
Again, I have never posted on PH. I'm not one of your so called stalkers. Paranoia?3/10![]()
Then you can provide a link, or document. You must be getting confused with Gen2 Haldex.
False. Wheel spin is not the same as slip on the axle. In a normal acceleration scenario with good grip on all four tires and a dry road, we know for a fact that more than 50% of torque can and does go to the rear axle with no wheel spin, due to slip from dynamic weight transfer. The lag from detection to engagement is the reason why Gen. II would sometimes exhibit a small amount of wheel spin, as the system did not have enough instantaneous pressure available to fulfill the amount of toruqe requested by the ECU.Yes. Especially seeing as Gen 2 Haldex required 15 degrees of wheel slip to couple. "Almost" doesn't cut it.
No, just flat out wrong. Full time does not denote a 50/50 or any torque split. It denotes that the system is working at all times, which all Haldex generations do. The word you seek is proactive, which Gen. II was not, since it could not always supply enough torque instantaneously to meet ECU demands -- an issue that sometimes manifested itself to the driver in "seesaw" like transitions from under to oversteer in on-the-limit handling.One is a full time all wheel drive system, the other is a part time all wheel drive system. Too subtle?
Audi previously stated 15% on their old website under the lexicon. Other than that, you have a link already -- Herlin confirms between 10-15% for the Gen. II
You ae confusing fact, with your opinion or supposition.we know for a fact that more than 50% of torque can and does go to the rear axle with no wheel spin, due to slip from dynamic weight transfer.
Fact is, there is no official Audi document stating a 85/15 split. This is just forum heresay, and that is where you appear to have picked it up from.
Herlin does not speak for Audi calibration, he is/was VP Marketing.
So are you accepting that Gen 4 has no 85/15 split ? And is actually 100/0 (or 95/5) ?
Once again, you have failed to prove any doumentation from Audi regarding this fictitous 85/15 split.
You ae confusing fact, with your opinion or supposition.
Provide calculations of the weight distribution of the car while static, and dynamically under acceleration. I doubt that it changes such that over 50% torque transfers to the rear on an equal friction surface.
Haldex is not, and will not be, including Gen V, a full time AWD system. If this was the case, the clutch packs would be burnt out and overheated in no time at all with a constant slip on the clutches. It may be working all the rime, but it certainly is not engaged all the time. You are plain wrong and misinformed.
This is just trolling at this point.
Furthermore, in terms of actual torque distribution, rough base numbers are (again) to be found in the e-mail from Herlin on the Gen. II system: on acceleration, 60-70 percent usually ends up at the rear, on a grippy surface with no wheel spin (axle slip is not necessarily wheel spin). ......
My brain is melting reading this.
As standard equipment, the Golf R transfers the TSIâs power to the road via the latest generation of Volkswagenâs 4Motion all-wheel drive system. Compared to the version implemented in the Golf R32, the system underwent significant advanced development. Above all, power transmission between the front and rear axles â especially the all-wheel differential that operates in an oil bath â exhibits clear advances compared to the previous generation. The most important one: Activation of the all-wheel differential no longer requires a difference in speeds between the front and rear axles.
That is because, different than on the previous generation, for the first time an electric pump is used to build pressure. The electric pump supplies oil to a hydraulic reservoir whose working pressure is 30 bar. A control module computes the ideal drive torque for the rear axle and controls, via a valve, how much oil pressure is applied to the working pistons of the multi-plate clutch. The contact pressure at the clutch plates rises in proportion to the desired torque at the rear axle. The amount of torque that is transferred can be varied continuously with the magnitude of the pressure applied to the clutch plates. Compared to the previous 4Motion generation, the system operates independent of slip, since the systemâs working pressure is always available. When starting up and accelerating, this prevents spinning of the wheels at the front axle more effectively, since the control module regulates the torque distribution based on dynamic axle loads. In extreme cases, nearly 100 percent of the drive torque can be directed to the rear axle. This results in further gains in active safety and dynamic performance.
I would go even further than that.As mentioned and explained previously,the only extreme circumstance in which 100% of the torque can be directed to the rear is if the front axle is slipping completely I.e no grip.
Otherwise even a locked up Haldex cannot apportion all of the torque to the rear.
I don't understand why everyone is getting hung up about wanting to have 100% torque fed to the rear wheels? Surely if you wanted that you would just buy a BMW? The article I posted said 'nearly 100%' and 'in extreme circumstances'. The fact that it prevents wheelspin (I had a stage 2+ Ed 30 previously) and offers better economy than a Torsen system (by disconnecting the rear wheels) works for me.
2. Can the Haldex ever cause the rear wheels to turn faster than the front (assuming equal friction surfaces for all tyres)
A: No. Haldex can never make the car into a power-oversteering monster (assuming equal friction surfaces for all tyres)
i'll just leave this here..
BMW E92 Audi S3 drift - YouTube
Good. Disprove what I have said if you have issue with it. Perhaps you'll make more sense than veeeight.It's possible that someone else's melted writing it.
The point is that whilst the Haldex clutch is a clever idea,and generally works well,it is not the omnipotent,all-conquering God of 4WD.
It's clear that there will always be jokers who will make wisecracks about anything that doesn't fit into their take on things.
Good. Disprove what I have said if you have issue with it. Perhaps you'll make more sense than veeeight.
1. Haldex 4 and 5 are predictive and proactive
2. The systems are faster at directing torque than a purely mechanical system
3. Haldex is generally better on mixed surfaces. Several Sport Auto tests demonstrate that it did better in sandy and snowy conditions than any mech system in their tests
4. It can transfer up to 100% of torque to the rear axle, and regularly shifts more than 50% to the rear under dynamic load shift, so statements that it is "FWD" most of the time are absurd
5. It nearly always sends at least 15% of power to the rear axle, disengaging with brake intervention
6. It can be set up to drive very much like a Torsen, distributing power evenly when needed and working to ensure that axle speeds are matched to quell slippage
I would suggest that the troll is the poster saying that this is all nonsense. The reality is that Audi's mech and electro mech systems have essentially reached parity with one another. There are slight advantages and disadvantages for both, but in reality, they both do the same job: matching axle speeds to quell slip and provide stable handling. Neither are set up to allow RWD type dynamics, because that isn't really the point. Just for the record, I'd have the EVO's system over just about anything else for use on mixed surfaces.