Well they're certainly driving it too hard. Does the guy know how to use momentum rather than just keeping his foot in it? The G80 break is a classic sign of the latter.
From the pic of the front end it's obviously been bottomed out hard repeatedly. The lower arm rammed upward, the end link transmitting that to the sway bar, the sway bar slamming into the upper control mount extension and the force having nowhere to go except prying the sway bar against its frame mount so hard that it failed.
That sway is in the factory frame mount*, while the lower is repositioned lower via the drop-lift's replacement crossmember. Which is hanging from factory crossmember mounts - whose ends form the factory lower bump-stop mount.
They've put their generic bolt-in bump stop mound in there and unfortunately it's just about the same gap as the factory spacing to the bump stop - but the factory is a 3-4" tall beehive looking thing with a lot more smush than that thin rancho part. They probably should have engineered their subframe to allow repositioning the factory bumpstop.
re the sway bar, the end links looks tall and probably is taller than stock and I'm guessing it might be just as much longer than factory as the number of inches that drop- crossmember adds. And I'm also figuring that it probably shouldn't be. Maybe needs re-engineering.
With the shock and torsion bar out, and the end links out on both sides and the sway bar mount straps replaced, jack up the lower control arm to full stop then pivot the sway bar to within a finger's width of the upper mount and measure the distance between the sway bar end and the bolt hole in the lower.
Then drop the lower to full droop and pivot the sway bar until it is close to the tie rod and again measure. Your end link length needs to be at or taller than the last measurement and at or shorter than the first measurement. Something between the two measurements.
And if it is being driven like a pre-runner - which it isn't meant to be, the vehicle is pretty heavy for what it is - I'm surprised they haven't been bending the tie rods. There's cheap and expensive ways to beef those up. And that tie rod end link clearance ought to be adjusted for those, too.
*I'd thought such drop-lifts moved those mounts downward too, but there's very little room to do so.
I also notice that they routed the ABS sensor cable up the wrong side of the upper control arm, it's supposed to go thru that empty clip above the rearmost upper mount, between the shock and those horribly routed battery cables. Savvy to put them inside the frame but wth with the no chafing guard?
It doesn't really matter which side the ABS wirings goes, it clips to the harness up above and inboard of the shock top, but the way they're smashing the sway bar into the frame, they're lucky that's stopping the ABS cable or the brake line from getting chewed up too. Especially as the factory brake line clip positions the line between the control arm and sway bar end.
eta I'm invoking a magic spell to get some more expert help for upgrades/mods, my stuff's stock / inexpensive
@Stryder106
@Burb One