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Yes, you can still drive it. You may have a tire out of balance or a wheel bearing getting bad. However, have a mechanic check it out soon.
Yes. In general. Though driving 55 mph on the highway with 4WD will use less than driving 75 mph on 2WD.
could be tires out of round,bent rim,out of balence wheel or wheel bearings. or it could be the u-joint is bad and it is off balancing your drive shaft
Could be a wheel weight missing, a bad ball joint or a bad shock.
My 1995 Ford Explorer XLT has the Control-Trac 4X4 system . It has settings for 2 wheel drive , automatic 4 wheel drive , and a low range 4 wheel drive ( because it has a 2 speed transfer case ) The low range four wheel drive has power going to all 4 wheels equally and is only used where the tires have " give " such as gravel or off road because the speed is limited to slower speeds ( I think mine is limited to 35 MPH in 4X4 LOW )
Tires and/or wheels need to be balanced? Bent wheel? Rear wheel drive? Drive shaft may need to be balanced
Place transmission in D2 and select VSA switch. only programed to work at less than 18 mph.
it means part-time four wheel drive. It will lock the differentials in the front and read of the four-wheel drive cars. Making them harder to turn in extreme turns. But allows equal power to all wheels, which is better for off-road conditions, or extreme weather conditions. Only have it in part time when needed, as it does use a little more fuel if you don't know how to drive with it properly. Always make sure before you switch to and from four wheel drive with the lever on the jeep liberty or any other four wheel drive. put the car in neutral, then turn on/off the 4-wheel drive hi or low, then go back into drive. Do not go faster than 60 mph on 4hi, and no faster than 25 on 4low. If you do not go into neutral before going into 4 wheel drive, you can strip the gears. You can do what I do and switch to and from wheel drive on the fly in the jeep liberty by "flicking" it to neutral, pop the 4 wheel drive lever, then "flick" the stick back into drive. Takes practice to get it right.
Tires need balancing.
Four minutes at 60 mph
At 60 MPH average, about 4 minutes.
Yes you can, but don't drive over 50 to 55 MPH