R_Lefebvre
Expedition Leader
are YOU joking?
it's got some special alloy steel that allows pathetically wimpy suspension components to be just as strong as properly designed ones? Where is your proof?
["Don't believe your eyes, believe me"]? That suspension is cheap crap period.
I don't have the drawings for the LR3 suspension to prove what it's made from, so I don't have what you're looking for. And if you don't even know the relative strengths of alloy vs. cast iron... I can't help you with that, you're lacking in some very fundamental knowledge to have this discussion. You're holding up an impossibly high bar for me to meet, while you are allowed to critique a design from the comfort of your PC and not even understandings the basics of metalurgy.
Obviously you've made up your minds so, there's no point arguing it.
Nobody here has said that the parts didn't fail, or that they didn't fail early, and it's really bad. What we're arguing about is the unknowable. Will they ALL fail like this? Clearly unlikely, as I'm sure there are many trucks over 45,000 miles already, and there's not a SINGLE complaint with NHTSA. You're saying this was done to save cost, I'm saying it's not, neither have proof... though some of us have actually worked for an automaker.
show me a pic of one that failed on a stock height truck driving down the highway and I will agree that it has anything to do with this discussion.
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Show me any time EVER than ANY truck ANYWHERE has had a complete and catastrophic shearing of the axle TUBE before the axle shaft broke, no matter WHAT suspension is on it, and then you'll understand the relevance. There's some real MMMM steel that shipped in the middle of this decade.
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