Cranks

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Fingers

Village Idiot
Vendor/Sponsor
Apr 1, 2008
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So, I've been looking at why cranks fail and what we might be able to do about it. I don't see this turning into a product, so I am going to open this up to the community.

I'll open with a simplified model of the first throw of the crank and a representation of only the Max force from a single piston firing. Note the location of the concentrated stress. (red) Exactly where the cranks break.

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Kappa9012

MAN.... I Broke it again.
Aug 5, 2008
694
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Peoria Il
I struggle with the crank being the issue. At least from my experience with Cat iron, we always get reports of crankshaft failures and everyone that I've recalled and had metlab analysis ran on, comes back fine metallurgically, and everytime prior to the analysis being ran, I find out there was a spun bearing which annealed the crank pin.

so while my rant probably has little bearing, no pun intended, on the duramax failures, i'm just curious how many crank failures legitimately failed do to true fatigue vs. a localized heat issue from a bearing.

What size fillet is there where that stress is the highest.
 

hondarider552

Getting faster
May 28, 2008
10,627
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Arizona
The cranks that I have seen all had exact same beach marks in them at the break, which indicates fatigue fracture.
 

dirty_max

Member
Jan 27, 2013
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eureka il
I struggle with the crank being the issue. At least from my experience with Cat iron, we always get reports of crankshaft failures and everyone that I've recalled and had metlab analysis ran on, comes back fine metallurgically, and everytime prior to the analysis being ran, I find out there was a spun bearing which annealed the crank pin.

so while my rant probably has little bearing, no pun intended, on the duramax failures, i'm just curious how many crank failures legitimately failed do to true fatigue vs. a localized heat issue from a bearing.

What size fillet is there where that stress is the highest.

ive seen quite a few cat cranks break and there were no spun bearings on any of them
 

Fingers

Village Idiot
Vendor/Sponsor
Apr 1, 2008
1,715
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Radius is 0.125"

It appears to be a fatigue failure on all those that I have examined or seen pictures of.
 

Burn Down

Hotrodder
Sep 14, 2008
7,092
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Boise Idaho
This is a crank from a member on here. I had the NDT guys at work stick it under there microscope 1x power iirc. The first pic shows what appears to be a sub surface inclusion in the fillet. That is the worst possible spot have a defect. I have been waiting for a large engine engineer with a degree in metalurgy to have a look at it before I posted about it but there travel funds have been cut drastically. Not sure when I will get a chance to show him the crank?
Counterweight1_zpsd8c8681c.jpg

Second picture shows the fillet and it is not discolored nor did it show signs of a spun bearing upon disassembly.
RodJournal1_zps5e9061a4.jpg

Another straight on shot of the inclusion.
RodJournal3_zpsa00c9f95.jpg


From what Fingers posted on the stress areas of the crank being the greatest in the fillet area, it explains this failure pretty well. The inclusion gave a place for the crack to start. The fine beach marks radiating away from the crack initiation site show this as a Bending fatigue fracture. These types of cracks are slow growing.

No crank can survive with flaws in certain areas... I think alot of these failures can be traced back to a flaw or spun bearing something... It explains why some hold riduclous power and others break stock.
 

Fingers

Village Idiot
Vendor/Sponsor
Apr 1, 2008
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Now let me throw another tid-bit at you. The initiation points are rotated from dead center by 10 - 20 degrees. Sometimes more. Always in the same direction.....
 

delong_1

<< my work
Dec 5, 2008
1,282
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Arvada, CO
I will throw in my bit of info on the subject, my crank snapped in the same area as most. no spun bearing. My good friend works for cat took a look at it, he said that it looked to be a mfg flaw. the outer edge has smoothed fracture lines and got more rough toward the center meaning that it had been separated/separating for a long time.
 

McRat

Diesel Hotrodder
Aug 2, 2006
11,249
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Norco CA
www.mcratracing.com
The following is Probably Incorrect:

The nose of the crank has low rotational mass and low resistance.
The rear has high rotational mass and high resistance.
The middle has high resistance.

I think it's twisting at the front from unequal load. One side has a huge amount of mass and resistance, and the other side is "easy".

But it seems some break with little abuse, and others take huge abuse for years. So it's a combo of that being the most unequal loading and a mfr defect combined, hence why they break in the same place most (but not all) the time.
 

Burn Down

Hotrodder
Sep 14, 2008
7,092
28
48
Boise Idaho
The following is Probably Incorrect:

The nose of the crank has low rotational mass and low resistance.
The rear has high rotational mass and high resistance.
The middle has high resistance.

I think it's twisting at the front from unequal load. One side has a huge amount of mass and resistance, and the other side is "easy".

But it seems some break with little abuse, and others take huge abuse for years. So it's a combo of that being the most unequal loading and a mfr defect combined, hence why they break in the same place most (but not all) the time.

I disagree on the twisting Pat. A Torsional fracture looks completley different from a Bending Fatigue Fracture. I do think your on to something possibly with the different weight/inertia between the front and rear of the crank. I also think flaws in the casting are a big/biggest contributer, I think I read somewhere you had mentioned that as well?
 

Burn Down

Hotrodder
Sep 14, 2008
7,092
28
48
Boise Idaho
Now let me throw another tid-bit at you. The initiation points are rotated from dead center by 10 - 20 degrees. Sometimes more. Always in the same direction.....

I don't follow you? What relation to tdc or bdc? I would have to look at this crank again but I thought the crack was on the side of the counterweight. Which makes sense to me looking at your stress chart. The biggest stress is at TDC cylinder firing.

Do you think empire is on to something with there different firing order cam shaft? I haven't studied it enough, might just be over my head:eek:
 

05chevy

Active member
Jun 10, 2010
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Dumb question but most of the cranks with failures. Where they stock, built, balanced, unbalanced or a little mixture of all?

I can understand if the crank has a weak spot or edge from manufacturing that would cause a starting point. But wouldn't a balanced rotating assembly have less of a chance of this happening. Wouldn't the machine shop or engine builder look over the crank shaft for these flaws?

Just asking because I'm curious. Great info tho
 

juddski88

Freedom Diesel
Jul 1, 2008
4,655
120
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Chesterfield, Mass.
Magnafluxing the crank doesn't catch these casting flaws, so it really is just the luck of the draw then? I mean, there are ways to keep stress off of it obviously to prolong its life, and to me every bit (logical setup) is worth it regardless if it breaks or not, but in the end if it's meant to be, you ain't going to change fate. yippee
 
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