If that doesn't work, you can try putting the vehicle up in the air such
that all 4 wheels are free. You probably haven't hurt anything yet.
As for driving in snow, low range is usually not a good idea unless the
snow is deep enough to really drag down the vehicle, or you need to pull
something heavy or climb a hill.
If your vehicle can run in 2 wheel or 4 wheel mode, it is usually not a
good idea to put it in 4 wheel mode unless the roads are slippery enough
to allow a bit of tire slip. This can vary, but your owners manual will
tell you if the vehicle has the type of transfer case and differentials
where it is safe to run in switched 4 wheel mode for very long except on
very slippery surfaces.
fanie proclaimed:
> Try reversing a good few meters, chances are the diff has wound up and
> that tension is preventing the vehicle from getting out of 4 low.
>
> Regards
> Stephen
>
> On Fri, 25 Nov 2005 10:06:46 GMT, TheSnoMan <admin@snoman.com> wrote:
>
>
>>Juliekristine wrote:
>>
>>>I put my husband's 2003 Ford Ranger in low 4wd when driving home from work
>>>in the snow. I did not exceed 35mph. Now the truck is stuck in low 4WD
>>