Not correct. Nitriding toughens the surface reducing the origination of a crack on the surface.
Cryo is a parts treatment that stress relieves the whole part without impacting it's heat treated properties. Especially good for heavily machined parts or parts with odd mass properties that would develop internal stresses from heat treatment.
Both address specific failure modes and are not exclusive to each other.
It's definitely related to the filet to my understanding, that is where the Winberg crank comes in that Wade and Wagler use...the Aluminum Hemi rods have a smaller diameter rod journal to my understanding, but the rods are narrower and use a narrower bearing, the have a much better filet and stronger rod journal... I do not know of any broken Winberg cranks with that rod combo.
Any broken billet crank I've heard of was built as a replica to OEM crank specs out of what I would expect to be best materials and processes on the market, leading me to believe it is a filet and journal problem...
All just my opinion
It's definitely related to the filet to my understanding, that is where the Winberg crank comes in that Wade and Wagler use...the Aluminum Hemi rods have a smaller diameter rod journal to my understanding, but the rods are narrower and use a narrower bearing, the have a much better filet and stronger rod journal... I do not know of any broken Winberg cranks with that rod combo.
Any broken billet crank I've heard of was built as a replica to OEM crank specs out of what I would expect to be best materials and processes on the market, leading me to believe it is a filet and journal problem...
All just my opinion
I should note that was very little effort with that small bar
Just had an 05 lly show up today with a broken crankshaft. 180k on it. Max effort tuning, with a built trans no other performance mods.
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Are most the failures in the LMM's? I'm creeping up on 70k miles and have been looking hard for an f350. I'm waiting for a piston to let go or the crank to crack.
It's definitely related to the filet to my understanding, that is where the Winberg crank comes in that Wade and Wagler use...the Aluminum Hemi rods have a smaller diameter rod journal to my understanding, but the rods are narrower and use a narrower bearing, the have a much better filet and stronger rod journal... I do not know of any broken Winberg cranks with that rod combo.
Any broken billet crank I've heard of was built as a replica to OEM crank specs out of what I would expect to be best materials and processes on the market, leading me to believe it is a filet and journal problem...
All just my opinion
There isn't one that is breaking more than the others IMOP.
Any ideas on price? Anybody running this setup in a DD to not have to worry about breaking a crank? Can/has Jon (Fingers) evaluate(d) the design?
Corey