Please tell me where that clliff is located so I can avoid it on my travels!
If you were a virtual wingsuiter, that would be a great place for a BASE jump.

Please tell me where that clliff is located so I can avoid it on my travels!

About all I can find out about it is that it is a Meritor RS21145FNN338557 and the Meritor website shows it as non-locking. It does not mention limited slip nor open.Do you know if it's open or limited slip? I did a bunch of searching this morning and didn't find anything on that, though I did see a sort of cutaway and it looked like limited slip.
Please tell me where that clliff is located so I can avoid it on my travels!
Do you know if it's open or limited slip? I did a bunch of searching this morning and didn't find anything on that, though I did see a sort of cutaway and it looked like limited slip.

These are open diff axles.
Damn. Guess I'll have to keep getting stuck while off-roading in BeamNG![]()
Not at all -- I'm sure some were ordered with detroit lockers for snowy or dirt road rural areas...
Tires will make the biggest difference to where and how you do or don't get stuck...
The Michelin XDE's my bus came to me with (from a R.I school district) specifically say "M/S" on the sidewall meaning 'mud/snow'. They are an open-block shoulder design tire. They are a compromise between hwy and traction.
Plenty of other truck tires that are even more aggressive.
You can see in the photos that they are attached via bolts through a strap and the rbber which is attached to the end of the wheel well.
So if I want to make this properly that all has to be reworked :-|

Yup, same setup as our FS-65! That strap provides stability for the back of the wheel well. The metal that the mud flap is attached to is the wheel well. I do know this for a fact as I have rebuilt the driver side wheel well.Maybe easier to see with my mudflaps being painted...
The metal above the mudflap angles towards the wheel well at about a 70° angle.
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