An all-wheel drive vehicle (AWD vehicle) is one with a powertrain capable of providing power to all its wheels, whether full-time or on-demand.
Types
editThe most common forms of all-wheel drive are:
- 1x1
- All unicycles
Reflects one axle with one wheel capable of being powered. - 2x2
- Some motorcycles and bikes
Reflects two axles with one wheel on each capable of being powered. - 4×4 (also, four-wheel drive or 4WD)
- Reflects two axles with both wheels on each capable of being powered.
- 6×6 (also, six-wheel drive or 6WD)
- Reflects three axles with both wheels on each capable of being powered.
- 8×8 (also, eight-wheel drive or 8WD)
- Reflects four axles with both wheels on each capable of being powered.
Vehicles may be either part-time all-wheel drive or full-time:
- On-demand or Part-time
- One axle is permanently connected to the drive, the other is connected as needed
- Full-time or Permanent
- All axles are permanently connected, with or without a differential.
- Independent
- The wheels are driven, but not dependent on a central mechanical power coupling.
Terminology
editParticularly in North America for several decades, the designation AWD has been used and marketed – distinctly from 4×4 and 4WD – to apply to vehicles with drive train systems that have permanent drive, a differential between the front and rear drive shafts, and active management of torque transfer, especially following the advent of the anti-lock braking system (ABS).
However, the designations AWD[1] and all-wheel drive[2] long predated the trend, with Associated Equipment Company (AEC) producing AWD trucks in 1929 in conjunction with the British subsidiary of the pioneering American firm Four Wheel Drive Auto Company. Additionally, General Motors began manufacturing a line as "all-wheel drive" as early as the late 1930s. This distinction in terminology is not generally used outside North America.[citation needed]
In the context of hybrid and electric vehicles, the North American designation of 'all-wheel-drive' may differ. In some hybrid vehicles, the combustion engine is only mechanically connected to the front wheels, while the rear wheels are powered independently by an electric motor; this may be marketed as eAWD. Furthermore, many electric vehicles have individual, unconnected motors powering each axle, or even each individual wheel, also without any center differential.
Characteristics
editWhen tire grip is good during road driving, a differential is used between the axles to avoid driveline windup. This is not required off-road, as the limited grip allows the tires to slip. All-wheel drive vehicles designed for extensive off-road use may not have such a differential, and so they suffer from wind-up when used on-road.[3] Selectable 4WD also avoids this problem and requires only a simple dog clutch in the transfer case, rather than a differential. For this reason, most early off-road vehicles used that system; e.g., Jeep, Land Rover.
As vehicles became more sophisticated and tires gave better winter performance in the 1960s, there was an interest in giving the benefits of all-wheel drive to conventional cars: not for off-road use but for winter use in snow or on wet roads. Exotic vehicles such as the high-powered Jensen FF followed by the AMC Eagle, Subaru Leone and Audi Quattro series were the first to offer all-wheel drive in a high-speed road-based car. These, particularly the Quattro, would extensively develop this drivetrain with the use of viscous couplings and differentials to provide a safe and drivable car. The first off-road / on-road hybrids such as the Range Rover also chose the permanent all-wheel-drive system rather than manual selection.
See also
edit- All-terrain vehicle
- Four Wheel Drive or FWD, one of the first companies, from 1909, to build four-wheel drive vehicles.
- Front-wheel drive
- H-drive
- Individual wheel drive (IWD)
- Rear-wheel drive
- Two-wheel drive
References
edit- ^ "Automotive History". allisons.org. Australia. Retrieved 24 October 2024.
1929: AEC started to build AWD trucks in conjunction with FWD (UK)
- ^ Meyer, Donald E. "The first century of GMC truck history" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 January 2014 – via GM Heritage Center.
By December [1939], GMC had orders for more than 4,400 all-wheel-drive military trucks.
- ^ Ware, Pat (1994). In National Service. Warehouse Publications. p. 118. ISBN 0-9525563-0-8.