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1986 Comanche problems


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If it’s a 86 it should be like mine then 

his transfer case should be a 207

and he should have a vacuum controlled front shift actuator on his front axle shifting it on and off

 

he might be lucky and his hand held 4WD shifter might be loose under the truck and not shifting the transfer case at all but who knows

I would jack the truck up and see what it does when you shift it 

does the front axle even spin ?

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yup, it might just need a simple tweak of the shift rods to get low range back. :L:   or the bushings might be shot.  or rust is allowing too much flex in the system.  or something inside is broken. (but that's less likely)

 

after that, check the link in my signature for a how-to for bypassing the CAD in the front axle.

 

 

45373847.jpg

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4 hours ago, Pete M said:

bypassing the CAD in the front axle.

Personal opinion time: I highly recommend installing THIS system for 4x4 selection instead of just locking the CAD. I find that 2wd low range is very useful for me. My truck doesn't get wheeled, but it does truck duty things. Most often, I don't need 4wd but I do need to go slow, so 2wd low range works great. Consider backing up a trailer where you can just let the clutch out and slowly back-up, no more feathering it. Or putting your truck into a small space so you can load whatever. Its way less stressful to creep backwards instead of twitching backwards in spurts. I also drive across rough ground often, and with 2wd low I can put the truck in second and take my feet off the pedals. It crawls along at the right pace and the bumps no longer cause it to squirt forward by accidentally tapping the gas. 

 

When you have 2wd low you will see the uses for it.

 

Another use is in bad weather I can put my truck is 4wd high, but leave the CAD disengaged and drive like normal. If I come to a patch of bad road its very easy to pull back on the knob and get instant, at speed, 4wd that engages when its supposed to.

 

So there you go, a long winded ramble telling you how to spend your money. Take it or leave it. Good luck!

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1 hour ago, JustEmptyEveryPocket said:

Personal opinion time: I highly recommend installing THIS system for 4x4 selection instead of just locking the CAD. I find that 2wd low range is very useful for me. My truck doesn't get wheeled, but it does truck duty things. Most often, I don't need 4wd but I do need to go slow, so 2wd low range works great. Consider backing up a trailer where you can just let the clutch out and slowly back-up, no more feathering it. Or putting your truck into a small space so you can load whatever. Its way less stressful to creep backwards instead of twitching backwards in spurts. I also drive across rough ground often, and with 2wd low I can put the truck in second and take my feet off the pedals. It crawls along at the right pace and the bumps no longer cause it to squirt forward by accidentally tapping the gas. 

 

When you have 2wd low you will see the uses for it.

 

Another use is in bad weather I can put my truck is 4wd high, but leave the CAD disengaged and drive like normal. If I come to a patch of bad road its very easy to pull back on the knob and get instant, at speed, 4wd that engages when its supposed to.

 

So there you go, a long winded ramble telling you how to spend your money. Take it or leave it. Good luck!

 

 

your t-case should be able to be shifted into hi-range on the fly. :L: 

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18 hours ago, Pete M said:

your t-case should be able to be shifted into hi-range on the fly

:dunno: I know mine should, but it never has. Any time I try (at any speed from 10mph - 50mph) it just gives me terrible grinding and no engagement. So the posi-lock is my solution. Has been working great for 3 years now. In this case, I will take what works.

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