roaniecowpony
Well-Known Member
A gear reduction system is a torque mulitplying system.BS meter is pegged. The reason people beef up drivetrains for off road vehicles is because of HOW the torque demands are being placed when rock crawling. Also for physical protection from obstacles but that’s another topic. It really doesn’t have anything to do with increased drivetrain mass via larger tires. The torque rating of an engine is the torque rating of an engine. Rock crawling places VERY unique demands on driveshafts and axles.
Also, to make an extremely important point, engines don’t have a clue what size your tires are or what your gearing is. ECU’s can be programmed for these changes for various reasons (speedometer, etc) but it doesn’t demonstrably change how the engine itself makes power. The engine “knows” fuel/air mixture and the associated rpm. That’s really it. You ask it to go via your foot, it obliges. Increased drivetrain mass takes more engine power to move due to inertia just as towing does.
To assert that large tires is somehow orders of magnitude harder on an engine than max towing is wildly inaccurate. Under certain circumstances, one or the other could be equally as harmful in the long term. Weight is weight. And yes, all weight on a vehicle isn’t created equal. But they aren’t orders of magnitude different.
All that to say, head gaskets aren’t blowing due to 37s. /rant
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