OK, I'll ask. Has anyone found a defect in that area? For that matter what, if any defects were found on any cranks and where?
Can't get you guys off the manufacturing defect idea, can I.
Has filling the blocks or using girdles seemed to help?What about block flexing?
The main problem seems to lay with the firing order, we have seen billet cranks break, so a problematic quality control or manufacturer defect is not likely. So that leaves the design weakness or harmonics you have been talking about. Jon can you stimulate the harmonics between the stock and new firing order to see if the crank problem lays in the firing order?
6.2 failures were demonstrated to be a harmonics issue, and the most frequent cause on inspecting the carnage almost every time was found to be a worn/completely failed elastomeric harmonic dampener. I grabbed a military surplus one and sure enough one of the accessories that had been changed out during its military life was the harmonic dampener and crank pulley. So far I've been lucky with that crank.
It's a documented fact that crank breakages affect every model duramax at any power level, and I'm assuming the equipment on the assembly line and their crank forging process has evolved slightly over the years. Given that the overwhelming majority of failures are at the first throw, the most likely cause would be harmonics focused in that area. (Unless you want to believe GM has manufacturing flaws that always occur in the first throw and somehow have never been fixed through multiple evolutions of the dmax) Sure a manufacturing flaw at the wrong spot could exacerbate an existing harmonic issue and make failure much quicker, but I have a hard time believing the first throw is that much MORE likely than the rest of the crank to have a manufacturing flaw.
I understand none of us wants to believe there is a critical design flaw in our trucks and its always easier to make it into a manufacturing fluke, but we should probably give up pushing the manufacturing flaw theory and let the man "think out loud".