Would you please explain what you mean by this? Using the brakes to transfer/balance torque isn’t a technique with which I’m familiar. Thanks!…but this video also shows practically no wheel braking to shift torque around which is quite suspicious.
There are many Subaru drivers who NEED AWD, like much of the population here in winter snow country.To me, I wouldn't really want to take a hybrid mudding or seriously off-road.
Some time ago I watched the same tests with older generations of test vehicles. Subaru did well. I think there were more tests in the older video, some involving mud and water, and while they may not have been 100% the same tests, they were very similar. For example, instead of rollers embedded in a road, maybe portable roller jigs located on pavement.I'm curious if an older model SK generation Forester would do better on those particular tests.
That could be, but I didn't see any Subaru negative bias. They had rated the Forester at the top the prior year.I am leaning toward the video being a one off outlier.
I think we will have to wait and see if it becomes an issue outside of this specific scenario. Vast majority of people who buy Subarus don't take them off of pavement. It is AWD after all, not 4WD.For those that know a lot more about the mechanics of hybrids and AWD, is this a software correctable issue or is the hybrid just screwed by design?
Silly for you only. Driving over curbs is a regular necessity for many people, whether a moving van, work truck, or personal vehicle. I did it weekly with my 2018 (granted, that was an XT, maybe that's why it worked). I never had any problems getting over the curb. From the description of one person who said they had the problem, I kept asking them questions, like whether they were getting wheelspin or something, which could have caused cutting of engine power. Never really got answers.Personally: I have been driving for about 50 years and never ever needed to do that maneuver.
Hence, for me, this was a silly test of non real-world conditions.