R_Lefebvre
Expedition Leader
Well since I did predict the type of failure that happened to this LR3 years before it did, I guess I do have some ability to judge build quality by looking at it.
You're missing the point.
You looked at the LR3, and said it was a crap design. We had maybe 3 failures, maybe, we don't even know the real cause. Anyway, the point being argued was 3 failures out of however many thousand samples does not indicate crap design. It indicates a quality defect.
Then you talk about the redrilled swivels and claim they are a good design because there haven't been any failures in a relatively small sample. I'm just pointing out that you've got this stuff backwards. That's a bad design, any engineer would be tarred and feathered by his peers by releasing a design like that. It's only OK because there aren't THAT many instances of it, relatively speaking.
And I guess you missed it when I said drilled swivels "are probably fine". There's probably a few hundred to a few thousand driving around like that, which is far shy of 10,000's.
I'm just trying to bring a little perspective to the situation.
Machining after welding does happen, but if the axle is drill in two different set-ups, one end at a time. Tolerance on hole alignment from "end to end" may very as much as +/- 1 degree. I doubt they drill both ends at the same time.
All trucks have un-equal caster. Just look at any report from the Alignment Shops. I have never had one of mine end up prefect side to side.
Almost missed this with everything else going on. I would strongly think they actually do machine the whole axle with one setup. Seems implausible to have 3 or 4 machining centers on one line, but when you're manufacturing a lot of axles per year, it makes sense, to reduce tollerance.
Unequal caster is probably because of the stackup of all the other tollerances on the assembled pieces.
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