The company I work for has just finished changing 3 crankshafts in different cruise ship engines. One was less than a year old. They think it was a bad forging but still have not confirmed it. The strange thing is that the motor (runs one of the six generators on the cruise ship) had less than 2000 hrs on it, and it also sits with 5 others that still have not had any issues. Now these cranks see a lot, and it broke about 2 throws back from the nose.
On the Dmax, could it be a misbalanced harmonic balance that is actually fatigue cracking the cranks. Are all of the broke ones running factory balancers. Is the rubber on the balancer still in tact. Has the balancer managed to shear the rubber and "jump" time on the balance???? Could it be bad forging (or castings) on the crank itself? Until someone breaks one during a controlled run in a lab, the jury is still out on the cause.
On the Dmax, could it be a misbalanced harmonic balance that is actually fatigue cracking the cranks. Are all of the broke ones running factory balancers. Is the rubber on the balancer still in tact. Has the balancer managed to shear the rubber and "jump" time on the balance???? Could it be bad forging (or castings) on the crank itself? Until someone breaks one during a controlled run in a lab, the jury is still out on the cause.