Okie doke, I've been at it again tonight, there have been so many posts on here in the mean time and I only have my phone to reply with and I don't want to seem ignorant so I'll just say that I'm grateful for all input as this problem has me perplexed at the mo.
I'd seen things like this before (not on freelanders) when I was a mechanic, but those were always attributed to the many universal/obvious issues which many people have already posted on here and diagnosed by following the usual fault finding path.
So, what I'll do is tell you what the car is doing, what I've done and where it stands now (because quite frankly this is going on a little longer than I'd hoped and certain commitments mean I can't be without a car)
As the car stands now:
Prop off so FWD only.
Starts and runs as normal, dash lights are TC, ABS, HDC. ABS is the latest and has only been on at the start of this issue (before the beginning of fault finding)
Car will go into gear and front wheels will drive.
The second the handbrake is released and you try to pull away both rear wheels lock. You can drag its lame arse end down a wet street and leave two skid marks. Both wheels are locked.
Jack up the rear and feel that both wheels are locked. Use brute force to turn the rear wheels by hand and they will move slowly, gradually easing up. Drop wheels and drums off and the hubs spin as normal, no grinding no excessive roughness.
CV joints are dry and the rubber seals are intact. A feel of the joint through the rubber says the joints are fine, diff mounts are also fine with no excessive movement.
Fasten wheels back on and everything turns as proper. Lower back to floor, get in, turn on and go to drive and you don't even get an inch of movement (yes, the handbrake is off)
*For reference: the problem originally occurred when car was moving (less than 20mph) now it is from the moment you set off. Problem was initially with rear N/S wheel locking and is now both wheels locking.
TC and HDC dash lights used to come on intermittently before this, they now, along with ABS are on all the time*
What I've done:
Checked all the mechanical bits at the rear from the outside I.e. not dropping the drive shafts or opening the diff.
Checked wiring for obvious breaks/trauma on all four ABS wheel sensors right up to the blue plugs and then as far up the car as I could trace the wires before they disappeared into a loom etc. Tracing the rear O/S one through the fuel pump housing led me to a black earth wire with a single female spade end which was seemingly attached to a tab on the fuel pump, but broke the tab due to rust when moved.
This was re made using a long length of wire direct to the battery (it was definitely earthed)
Tried car, still no go.
Removed 1x 5a fuse for ABS from drivers fuse box, removed 2x 40a for ABS fuses from engine bay relay/fuse box, removed big plug from ABS control module/pump/the bit the brake pipes run into inside drivers wing, all the above at the same time so that the ABS system is pretty damn disabled.
Tried car still no go.
In between each attempt to drive the car I have made sure the back wheels turn by hand prior to trying it under engine power.
I only have a cold, damp pavement to work on at the in-laws house with an indirect route to my tools with one side of the car on the road. Also because of having to get the bus I can only work on the car from around 19:30 till the neighbours kids go to bed (they don't like being woken up by lots of high velocity language and a revving diesel engine apparently)
No sympathy wanted, just wanted to state what I'm up against incase someone suggests *just* dropping the diff or driveshafts, using ten grands worth of diagnostic equipment or buying a donor car and swapping it piece by piece because frankly, now I've done what I have with the ABS stuff I'm leaning back towards mechanical failure.
So yeah, this is where I stand, holding the keys to a very comfortable paperweight.