Many will do what you’re describing—getting a front and rear wheel off the ground at the same time will leave it stranded. A limited slip center differential will ensure if one axle loses traction the power goes to the other, but many vehicles cheap out and have open differentials on each axle, meaning when one on each axle loses traction it’s just spinning wheels.
Some vehicles have limited slip front/rear/front+rear differentials that avoid this issue. Many newer vehicles simply use the traction control and brakes to avoid it—if a wheel is spinning, it applies the brakes to provide resistance and redirect some torque back to the other wheel.
Like many others are saying, “AWD” is such a broad term as to be basically meaningless.
Many will do what you’re describing—getting a front and rear wheel off the ground at the same time will leave it stranded. A limited slip center differential will ensure if one axle loses traction the power goes to the other, but many vehicles cheap out and have open differentials on each axle, meaning when one on each axle loses traction it’s just spinning wheels.
Some vehicles have limited slip front/rear/front+rear differentials that avoid this issue. Many newer vehicles simply use the traction control and brakes to avoid it—if a wheel is spinning, it applies the brakes to provide resistance and redirect some torque back to the other wheel.
Like many others are saying, “AWD” is such a broad term as to be basically meaningless.