Originally posted by wengnuts
If you have TC with diagonal wheels off the ground i would expect it to drive if you are crossing something flat like a culvert but probably not if you are turning up an embankment.
Where the TC struggles is where there is an impediment to progress in addition to no grip on a wheel or wheels. For example you are pulling a trailer or you have a wheel off the ground and the other one is up against a rock or ledge. The amount of brake clamp will determine how much torque the wheel on the ground gets. If the loaded wheel needs more torque to make it turn than the brake can clamp on the opposite wheel then all that will happen is the spinning wheel will keep spinning. This is because open diffs, by the nature of their design, share torque equally. That is why in a 2wd with open diff and one wheel on a slippery surface you don't go anywhere. It only takes a little bit of engine torque to spin the no grip wheel, so that is same torque the wheel with grip gets, but it is not enough to drive it. (If you can put more weight on the no grip wheel and improve its coefficient of friction with the surface so that it needs more torque to make it spin then you might get enough torque to make the other wheel with grip drive the car)
The main advantages of TC over a manual locker are that TC is automatic and works on all surfaces and won't cause as much side slip. If you are on wet uphill bitumen and nail the accelerator to do a tight turn into a gap in the traffic the inside front wheel normally spins (80/100 series land cruiser without visco centre diff or series 1 discoverys) and you won't go far. TC will act on the slip straight away but that is not a scenario you would ever consider locking a diff lock for because it will drive you off the road as soon as the surface grip improved.
If you are side-on to a slope a locked diff will cause that axle to slide down the slope if there is any wheel spin as both wheels will spin where as TC should just stop the upper wheel from spinning (or at least not let the lower side wheel spin as much).
Also with TC you probably won't bust as many things mechanically in the drive line as you potentially could with a locker (especially a manual locker engaged when it shouldn't be) because, as previously stated, the TC probably can't transfer all the engine torque x 1st gear x low range x diff ratio to a wheel with grip like a locker can.
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