KevinNY said:
What part of saw it happen don't you understand? Guy was running an H3 w/35s, seemed like a fatigue failure because it was not on a hard section of trail. A quick internet search will show you tons of tie rod and front diff housing failures on H3's.
I wasn't disputing what you saw

My point was that personal experience seeing a tie-rod bend doesn't necessarily translate as applying generally to all H3s (I know a ton of H3ers who wheel the heck out of their vehicles and have never had a tie-rod fail). That particular tie rod might have been bad - it happens on every vehicle that's wheeled, regardless of make. It's not necessarily a syptom of a systemic issue with H3s.
As you suggested, I did a quick internet search on google of 'H3 tie rod failure' and came up with 2 legitimate hits. One from ebola, one from hummerforums (both of which I'm a member). Given that these are hummer forums frequented by H3ers who actually wheel their vehicles, I'm surprised there weren't more hits.
I also did a google search of 'H3 differential failure' and came up with 1 hit.
For reference, I did 'H2 tie rod failure' and the legit results filled the first page and then some. The primary reason for H2 tie rod failures is the huge weight of the H2 and the stock truck tie-rods used in production vehicles, combined with off-roading.
Just to cover my 'quick web search' back, I just typed in 'tie rod failure' - the 1st page results covered GM (2 links), Ford (1 link), BMW (1), Audi (1), and Land Rover (1). No Hummer links were found until the 3rd page, after mentions of numerous Ford, a dumptruck and even a VW. Using internetlogic, it would appear that Hummer tierods are better built than 3 German carmakers! woohoo!!!
Seriously though, I'm pretty convinced, through my own personal experience and supplemental research, that H3 tierods are just fine, and pose no greater risk of failure than any other off-road oriented vehicles out there. Your experience is different, so I doubt there will be any convincing you otherwise
