welded diff
Moderator: martauto
- Boyraceruk
- E30 Zone Newbie

- Posts: 236
- Joined: Sat Apr 11, 2009 11:00 pm
- Location: Sheffield
Understeer and squeaking tyres going around corners. Hell to park. Otherwise no known issues apart from INSTANT DEATH!
Sounds like you might need to chat to the boys over at Trampdrift.
Sounds like you might need to chat to the boys over at Trampdrift.
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kev_skyline
- E30 Zone Newbie

- Posts: 63
- Joined: Wed Aug 22, 2007 11:00 pm
- Location: Dublin
theyre fine i drive with one every day, once you have some cop on youll get used to it in no time and have lots of sideways fun in the wet and lots of grip in the dry 
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kev_skyline
- E30 Zone Newbie

- Posts: 63
- Joined: Wed Aug 22, 2007 11:00 pm
- Location: Dublin
all them bad stories are generally from people who have never driven with a welded diff.
Quaife do one for around £500. It really is a quality bit of kit and worth the money if you ask me I should have one fitted soon.Oh and I wouldn`t take a car with a welded diff out on the road, In the wet its even worse than a race spec 2-way lsd if you have to lift off the power in a bend the outside wheel cant rotate faster than the inside wheel and you end up facing the way you came befor long.
Last edited by roy46ss on Thu May 14, 2009 11:11 pm, edited 2 times in total.
`91 320i se, `94 Audi S2 Avant 288WHP, `12 Golf GTD
Its designed to slowly transfer the power from the wheel with less traction to the one with more without locking-up suddenly. It makes the car more predictable.
`91 320i se, `94 Audi S2 Avant 288WHP, `12 Golf GTD
Indeed, if thats what you want. I'm guessing that someone that is considering locking their diff is not looking for predictable.roy46ss wrote:Its designed to slowly transfer the power from the wheel with less traction to the one with more without locking-up suddenly. It makes the car more predictable.
M3Jim wrote:I'm guessing you don't have an lsd?Felix79 wrote:Why dose a welded diff help drifters?
My Alpina has a 1/4 LSD
Felix79 aka Dan
If you got haters, then your doing something right!
E85 Z4M Roadster
If you got haters, then your doing something right!
E85 Z4M Roadster
when cornering hard an open diff lets all the torque spinn the inside wheel but an LSD transfers the torque to the outside wheel and when enough torque is transfered to overcome the friction of that tire with the road the back end will step out and your drifting.
`91 320i se, `94 Audi S2 Avant 288WHP, `12 Golf GTD
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madaboutthe30
- E30 Zone Camper

- Posts: 1392
- Joined: Sun Oct 21, 2007 11:00 pm
- Location: Stanmore, Harrow
Think of the rear wheels working together as oppose to independently. One wont spin without the other.Felix79 wrote:Why dose a welded diff help drifters?
Its like the old matchbox cars we use to play with when we were kids, the wheels would only spin together at the same time as there would be one basic axle connecting them together
For those that actually know what they are talking about, am I right in thinking that? Or have I confused things even more?
Dreaming of the day I purchase an E30 M3
--- e30 motorsport cab-- in the process of becoming a trailer queen
--- Z4M Coupe - daily driver
--- e30 motorsport cab-- in the process of becoming a trailer queen
--- Z4M Coupe - daily driver
Sorry I read the question wrong a welded diff locks the diff all the time so both wheels turn at exactly the same speed always. This makes tight bends difficult and parking a nightmare. But makes drifting easier.
`91 320i se, `94 Audi S2 Avant 288WHP, `12 Golf GTD
I`d say thats a good example.madaboutthe30 wrote:Think of the rear wheels working together as oppose to independently. One wont spin without the other.Felix79 wrote:Why dose a welded diff help drifters?
Its like the old matchbox cars we use to play with when we were kids, the wheels would only spin together at the same time as there would be one basic axle connecting them together
For those that actually know what they are talking about, am I right in thinking that? Or have I confused things even more?
`91 320i se, `94 Audi S2 Avant 288WHP, `12 Golf GTD
Thanks for the reply guys. So driftting with the diff is about the tourque causing the snap rather than a loss of traction? Is this how they controll it with high revs?
Felix79 aka Dan
If you got haters, then your doing something right!
E85 Z4M Roadster
If you got haters, then your doing something right!
E85 Z4M Roadster
A loss of traction is caused by to much torque being applied to the tires. Once the traction is lost a combination of revs and opposite lock determine the angle or degree of "sidewaysness" and the lenght of the slide.
`91 320i se, `94 Audi S2 Avant 288WHP, `12 Golf GTD

