ian4x4 said:
Thanks Maby, after reading your explanation I looked again at the PHEV video.
It does seem that due to limited articulation of the front and rear 'axles', the PHEV has lost traction of one wheel of both axles.
When I looked initially, I thought that one axle still had both wheels on the ground, and it was the inability of this axle to start to move the car on its own that was the problem.
I see that I was wrong. It would seem the problem is not lack of power to get going on the incline on one motor/axle, which would be worrying.
Exactly - it's a cross-articulation problem and very difficult to recover from without limited slip or lockable diffs on both axles and in the middle. The 4WD lock button on the PHEV simulates the lockable centre diff, but the diffs in each axle are just standard road units and not suitable for genuine off-road use.
It's always tempting to assume that you can play tricks with the ABS to achieve the same effect as a diff lock, but never forget that the two are designed for exactly opposite effects - the ABS is there to stop the car as quickly as possible - the diff lock is there to keep it moving!