you guys realize everyone jumped on the "AF is a major help to the crank" after Jon's thread about it possibly improving the harmonic issues seen by his computer simulations and then, based on the little sample size we have here on this site, it was said it keeps them from breaking.
since that was done by Jon, the post on here and other forums about it FIXING broke crank shafts is rediculous and yet, no one jumped on them letting them know that its not a guaranteed fix. Now that we on this forum have actually seen a failure from our small sample size, its assumed that we all imply a AF cam does NOT help the crank. No one has said that and i hate to say it but implyed posts are where people take that info and run with it like a cummins external oiling system.
I see this happen all the time on forums and since i feel this forum is one of the top one for good, reliable info, id like to think we all look at both ends of the spectrum to put together our facts by a very well done deductive reasoning.
no hard feelings :hug:
I've seen my name thrown around a bit here so I guess I should say a few things.
First, I didn't / don't have the answer. If I did, I would be rich right now.
Second, I like the torque application to the crank better with the Alt-firing order than stock. However, and I've said this before, I don't know that it will save cranks. Feedback from those that have been in the position to use Alt and Std order cams back to back indicate that the Alt-fires are smoother. That alone is one reason to go alt-fire, but is says nothing for the crank longevity.
Third, these are obvious fatigue failures. They are happening at the obvious stress riser locations on the crank. The first throw is the primary failure point, but they fail frequently elsewhere too.
Lastly, I have several candidates for root cause, but no proof. Until I can quantify each candidates impact on stressing the crank, they are only theory. I suspect it is a combination.
FWIW, here is what I am actively looking into in no special order:
- Under supported snout of cranks
- Short rod syndrome vibrations.
- Crank rotational velocity changes. ECM based, Short Rod based, and tuning based.
- Thrust loading of the crank.
- External loading. Cam, oil pump, water pump, CP3.