I was just commenting in another topic that reminded me of an issue that confounded me for two winter driving seasons. While it seems obvious to me in hindsight I thought I would toss it out there for those with a Bronco II or Ranger that might experience the same since I haven't seen it mentioned before.
I had got an 89 BII used with about 115K miles. This one had auto locking hubs and a pushbutton selector. It needed some work such as brakes but no big deal. It also had one mystery problem. When in 4wd it would not drive straight. It would want to run in a slight turn to the right or to the left but not forward. Whenever I tried to correct to center, it would flip and want correct past dead forward and go the other direction.
I was using 4wd in snowy roads, like I had done many times in my 88 BII so I knew it should have been good.
Brought it back to the used car dealer twice. They claimed to find nothing and that it was fine the first time, and claimed to have fixed it second time after I explained better to them the problem. Their explanation as to what they fixed made no sense to me and I forget what the claim was. It didn't help.
So I took it to the Ford dealer and pay out of my pocket figuring the smarmy car dealer wasn't going to do anything serious anyway. Ford dealer said one of the locking hubs wasn't working properly. Okay and since auto locking hubs would be expensive I had manual hubs put on. In my opinion I preferred manual locking hubs anyway. That did not resolve the problem and even tho I could demonstrate the problem (there was snow on the ground to drive it in at the time), they couldn't identify any problem yet had no idea what it might be. To their credit the mechanics at the dealer didn't treat me like I was stupid.
Okay, so I decided, it was just snow, I could live with it. Also, now with manual locking hubs on it, I found that with hubs locked but still in 2wd that it tracked just fine. The problem only occurred when 4wd was engaged.
Some time later (still winter) I had to have some other service and had my local shop look into this problem. They declared it was the transfer case problem. They did some work (or claimed to), it made no difference.
So I just lived with it. I thought maybe someone had put a different ratio rear end so the front/rear was no longer matched.
I noticed eventually that if the snow was really bad and conditions were really poor I didn't experienced this stubbornness against going strait.
Eventually, it came time to replace the tires. The next snowfall after that, the problem was gone. The tracking was perfect.
I kick myself over that because I knew balanced tire set was important and one early suspicion was that one tire might be a different size so I checked that they were all the same size tire. What I failed to recognize was that not all the tires were the same brand and they were pretty well worn already when I got the vehicle.
So what was happening is that the net front and rear speeds didn't match when going strait and even though there was snow, there was still enough traction for the front to rear error to cause it to want to turn a little bit and fight going straight and created this situation where the roads could be bad enough to get into 4wd, but not so bad as to keep this tendency from showing.
I had got an 89 BII used with about 115K miles. This one had auto locking hubs and a pushbutton selector. It needed some work such as brakes but no big deal. It also had one mystery problem. When in 4wd it would not drive straight. It would want to run in a slight turn to the right or to the left but not forward. Whenever I tried to correct to center, it would flip and want correct past dead forward and go the other direction.
I was using 4wd in snowy roads, like I had done many times in my 88 BII so I knew it should have been good.
Brought it back to the used car dealer twice. They claimed to find nothing and that it was fine the first time, and claimed to have fixed it second time after I explained better to them the problem. Their explanation as to what they fixed made no sense to me and I forget what the claim was. It didn't help.
So I took it to the Ford dealer and pay out of my pocket figuring the smarmy car dealer wasn't going to do anything serious anyway. Ford dealer said one of the locking hubs wasn't working properly. Okay and since auto locking hubs would be expensive I had manual hubs put on. In my opinion I preferred manual locking hubs anyway. That did not resolve the problem and even tho I could demonstrate the problem (there was snow on the ground to drive it in at the time), they couldn't identify any problem yet had no idea what it might be. To their credit the mechanics at the dealer didn't treat me like I was stupid.
Okay, so I decided, it was just snow, I could live with it. Also, now with manual locking hubs on it, I found that with hubs locked but still in 2wd that it tracked just fine. The problem only occurred when 4wd was engaged.
Some time later (still winter) I had to have some other service and had my local shop look into this problem. They declared it was the transfer case problem. They did some work (or claimed to), it made no difference.
So I just lived with it. I thought maybe someone had put a different ratio rear end so the front/rear was no longer matched.
I noticed eventually that if the snow was really bad and conditions were really poor I didn't experienced this stubbornness against going strait.
Eventually, it came time to replace the tires. The next snowfall after that, the problem was gone. The tracking was perfect.
I kick myself over that because I knew balanced tire set was important and one early suspicion was that one tire might be a different size so I checked that they were all the same size tire. What I failed to recognize was that not all the tires were the same brand and they were pretty well worn already when I got the vehicle.
So what was happening is that the net front and rear speeds didn't match when going strait and even though there was snow, there was still enough traction for the front to rear error to cause it to want to turn a little bit and fight going straight and created this situation where the roads could be bad enough to get into 4wd, but not so bad as to keep this tendency from showing.