TurboMinivan
Still plays with cars
- Location
- Lehi, UT
I have not intentionally chosen to not do anything yet.
I just wanted to know there was something before I was digging through snow to find it.
Sounds perfectly logical to me.
Just so you know: in the tool kit with the jack is a shiny silver screw-in tow hook eyelet thingy. There is a small plastic removable cap on each bumper (rear left, front right) which reveals a threaded hole. Pop the cap, screw in the eyelet, attach a strap, and presto.
That is one of the reasons I went with the Outback, there is a video showing those others not able to give the rear wheels enough power. However, they didn't show a RAV4 with the center diff locked, and I think I learned later that a couple others had that option too.
One of these days when we have a RAV4 in stock (actually, we have one now) I'm going to take it to a dirt hill and try a stop-n-go climb test with the diff unlocked and then locked. I want to see if locking it will actually send enough torque to climb the hill. (I've already tried it personally in a RAV4 without the diff lock feature, and I verified the diff can't send torque rearward in that scenario.)
I told my mom that if there is snow on the road up there to push the center-diff button. Seems to work. Score one for driving. And for the same reason, my wife prefers the Outback and not having to push a button. Score one for happy wife.
Sounds like a win-win.
You can pass this on to the marketing dept:
Bottom line is their older Subi's make it just fine and the new ones don't and they can't find a button to turn the nanny-mode off.
I want to talk to you in greater depth about this. I am genuinely curious. (BTW, simply pressing 'VDC off' in your car will make it functionally equivalent to any pre-2008 Subaru with Active AWD.)
nanny traction control stuff SUCKS on the 2012 Jeeps as well. ... I think that shit is insurance company mandated, so I think we are screwed
Nope--this is the federal government at work. They are the ones that mandated electronic stability control for all cars, and this requirement was fallout from the entire Ford Explorer/Firestone debacle. FYI