OEM specs, with better steel.
Few OEM cranks break first year, so guessing only time or mileage will tell that tale.
Few OEM cranks break first year, so guessing only time or mileage will tell that tale.
Got real lucky, really.Built engine lbz race truck I'm tearing into.
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There are much better and certainly cheaper options to repair it.Guess you can add another broken crank to the list ? is this a duromax issue that is being kept secret? Mine is a completely stock 2015 with 200,010 miles on it. Might seem a lot but to me that was pretty low miles. I have had both Ford and dodge and had to put trannys in at around 250k, but a motor ! Something seems rong here. GMC said 16-18k to fix it. I guess now I make payments on a dead weight !
Yeah like some legal firm filing a class action about it..There are much better and certainly cheaper options to repair it.
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Gale Banks says his fluid damper will prevent this and has a YouTube video on it. I think it is a design flaw that only a redesigned crank will fix.
I think the biggest point made by Gale in his video wasn't necessarily the fluid damper but internally balancing and not swinging a huge weight outside the mains.
A viscous flywheel wouldn't help. The problem is the counterweight on the damper when the distance between it and the front main on a Duramax is so far. Think about it we are swinging a large weight at the end of a long lever. The counter weight on the balancer puts an extreme load at the common breaking point. If you move that weight to between the mains where it is supported at each end you eliminate huge amount of that stress from the crank. I think a combination of internal balance and an altered firing order cam along with a good damper viscous or not will solve all the problem