Ahh yes, the Duramax crankshaft. At least this one is still in one piece! :roflmao:
Look at the fillets:
One thing that is obvious is that not only is the radius not particularly wide, but it isn't even finish ground. that leaves a small discontinuity with a circular lay that makes a nice stress riser.
Let's look at a Cummins crank:
Note that this extremely manly piece of forged steel was designed for an engine that topped out at 160HP and 400lb/ft or torque in it's initial incarnation. It's not noticeable in this crank, but the journals on all Cummins cranks are induction hardened before finish grinding. On many cranks you can see the rainbow discoloration on the arms opposite the journal side.
Check out the fillets:
The fillets have a much wider radius vs the DMax crank, and they are finish ground to top it off. No stress risers. Keep in mind this is a 4.72" stroke crank, and the 6.7 crank is 4.88" stroke. Main journals are 3.268" diameter, and the rods are 2.717". The thick arms between throws definitely doesn't hurt either. I think with a few changes the pre-L5P engines wouldn't have had crank issues, at least at stock HP/tq levels, say current L5P power levels. After all, plenty of 6.0 and 6.4 Ford guys made more than that on a routine basis, and if they kept head gaskets intact they didn't have crank issues. Which is impressive since the International cranks look puny even compared to the Duramax crank. Well, until you look at the diameter and overlap of the 6.0/6.4 main and rod journals. The rolled fillets definitely don't hurt either