In a round about way, AWD could be considered a safety feature.
Let's say you drive some remote areas where traction is limited, possibly snowy, icey, with hills, drifting snow, ect... or I suppose muddy or sandy...
In these traction limited situations, you're more likely to get stuck without AWD than you would if you had AWD. When going up a slippery hill, your more likely to stay on the road and not wind up off the road, possibly hitting something or getting stuck off the road.
So, AWD is potentially safer than FWD , just not under braking...
Our Tellurides aren't true 4WD and I haven't driven my Telluride in it's Snow mode or lock mode enough to say for sure how it handles when decelerating on snow or ice... but in my 4wd experience in other vehicles I personally dispute the notion that having 4wd doesn't help you slow your vehicle down. The drive train itself all being coupled together can provide some deceleration without ever applying the brakes. So,, I have personally experienced better deceleration with four wheels being connected to the drive line. Next spring I might be able to tell you whether or not this might be true in a Telluride with AWD locked.
Now modern vehicles with stability control do all kinds of fancy braking even when the driver isn't applying the brakes, so the deceleration advantage of a 4wd or Locked AWD may not be significant in a Telluride I can't say for sure right now.
I do know that even when not locked in AWD, it can actually be safer when forward traction is needed to get where you are going. It might not be safer for everyone, but for some people in certain situations it actually could potentially get you back home more safely than if you didn't have AWD. It just depends on where you might be traveling and how bad the road conditions are.
Let's say you drive some remote areas where traction is limited, possibly snowy, icey, with hills, drifting snow, ect... or I suppose muddy or sandy...
In these traction limited situations, you're more likely to get stuck without AWD than you would if you had AWD. When going up a slippery hill, your more likely to stay on the road and not wind up off the road, possibly hitting something or getting stuck off the road.
So, AWD is potentially safer than FWD , just not under braking...
Our Tellurides aren't true 4WD and I haven't driven my Telluride in it's Snow mode or lock mode enough to say for sure how it handles when decelerating on snow or ice... but in my 4wd experience in other vehicles I personally dispute the notion that having 4wd doesn't help you slow your vehicle down. The drive train itself all being coupled together can provide some deceleration without ever applying the brakes. So,, I have personally experienced better deceleration with four wheels being connected to the drive line. Next spring I might be able to tell you whether or not this might be true in a Telluride with AWD locked.
Now modern vehicles with stability control do all kinds of fancy braking even when the driver isn't applying the brakes, so the deceleration advantage of a 4wd or Locked AWD may not be significant in a Telluride I can't say for sure right now.
I do know that even when not locked in AWD, it can actually be safer when forward traction is needed to get where you are going. It might not be safer for everyone, but for some people in certain situations it actually could potentially get you back home more safely than if you didn't have AWD. It just depends on where you might be traveling and how bad the road conditions are.