I have a question for the more engineer minded amongst us. Looking at this picture of Doug's pivot frame:
http://www.hackneys.com/mitsu/photos/buildup_album_03/image001.htm
It looks to me as if the load of the camper is concentrated at the three points of the pivot frame with the rear load being carried at the pivot bolt right at the very back. Does this set up in any way increase the possibility for frame flex compared to a commercial truck box which would mount directly on top the frame rails?
I don't think the 3 points increases the possibility of frame flex because for the allowable load (about 8000 lbs) the frame is supposed to flex to allow the wheels to stay on the ground.
That's why the frame is riveted and bolted together and not welded into one rigid piece.
The problem with just 3 mounting points is that concentrating the load in just 3 places may exceed the capacity of the frame at one of those points. Even though it's less than the maximum payload.
The Mitsubishi body builder manual says that you have to distribute the load over the frame and not concentrate it in just a few places.
That's why, depending on the load, a 4 point mount is better than a 3 point mount. It spreads the load over more of the frame.
Unimog uses a 4 point frame.
If you think about it, a 3 point mount is really only a 2 point mount. The 2 flexible mounts at one end are really in one place horizontally along the frame. And the 3rd pivot is at the other end of the frame.
A 4 point mount, like the unimog, would distribute a third of the weight at one end, a third of the weight in the middle and a third of the weight at the other end.
Myself, Darrin and others have used 3 point mounts, but my load is under 4000 lbs, less than half the maximum payload. Plus in Darrin's case, he used a sub frame that spread the load over the entire frame much like a normal truck body would do.
Maybe if you are closer to or above the maximum payload, a 4 point mount is better.
I can't tell from the picture where the break is either, but in addition to using a 3 point mount and exceeding the maximum payload, Doug also extended the frame.
If his extension was more rigid than the rest of the factory frame it could have created a stress point or hot spot where the normal flexing of the frame was concentrated and caused a fracture from repeated bending at one spot.
It sounds from his report and the update that the camper is being shipped home that they are okay.
Beats having a problem like this if they were sailing across the ocean instead of driving on a South American road.