Mine was not mag'd. It would have been seen if it had been mag'd, it was my original 125k mile crank so I assumed it was good.
The most notable case was that DC-10 that blew the engine rotor disk in the #2 engine and crashed because the rotor explosion cut the hydraulics. It was titanium though. It was fixed by changing the mfr process, not by redesign.
Lets stick some numbers in here instead of going on conjecture.
A chamber pressure of 3500 PSI produces a load on the crank from a single cylinder of about 45,000 lbs. This happens between 7°-14° ATDC.
A 10 gram swinging weight 4" from the center produces a 22.542 lb radial force on the crank.
I'm looking for the loading from the accessory belt and the loadings from the water and oil pumps. Need the loading for the CAM too.
With those, I can calc the radial and thrust loadings on the crank.
Does gm use pulse plasma nitriding on our cranks from factory? Or i guess does Isuzu?
gm isuzu doesnt build them... why not switch firing orders empire diesel has had great luck with a powerstroke(i think) firing order
1500 bucks is one reason... If that is the true fix then it would be worth it but I don't think they have enough of them out there to prove it is the fix. I'm not sure how you could, when one breaks at stock power and another holds 1000+ hp.
Lets stick some numbers in here instead of going on conjecture.
A chamber pressure of 3500 PSI produces a load on the crank from a single cylinder of about 45,000 lbs. This happens between 7°-14° ATDC.
A 10 gram swinging weight 4" from the center produces a 22.542 lb radial force on the crank.
I'm looking for the loading from the accessory belt and the loadings from the water and oil pumps. Need the loading for the CAM too.
With those, I can calc the radial and thrust loadings on the crank.
How so what?
The bearings in the dmax will hold out fairly well when the oil supply goes away, but not forever. So you will see crashed bearings on some broken cranks, but not all cranks that break will have bearing issues.
My point is, from what I can tell, spun bearing are NOT the cause of the crank breaking.
Also, from what I can tell, the support from the #1 main is inadequate.
How so what?
The bearings in the dmax will hold out fairly well when the oil supply goes away, but not forever. So you will see crashed bearings on some broken cranks, but not all cranks that break will have bearing issues.
My point is, from what I can tell, spun bearing are NOT the cause of the crank breaking.
Also, from what I can tell, the support from the #1 main is inadequate.