Well, I spoke to soon. I followed up with the Filthy Motorsports guy - and it tuns out he is the real deal. Ben Brazda - to whom I spoke - is the owner of Filthy Motorsports, and also the owner of Crown Race Gears. He builds a lot of gears setups for Ultra 4 racers, rock bouncers, drag racers, mud drag racers, desert racers, and the like. He certainly was able to demonstrate - at least to me - that he knows what he is talking about.
He spoke with me for quite a while on my issues. He believes my failures may likely be a setup issue, and that for an application like mine I should not be setting it up with a standard pattern that you would use for a GMC truck - which is what I did. He recommends - and does - a much deeper setup much closer to the root to allow for deflection which will invariably occur in high shock-load situations. He actually said that with a deeper setup, even the low-quality Yukon Chinese gears should hold up. He also recommended going with Revolution as another alternative, and that should be fine as well. When I told him I have pictures of my pattern, he suggested that I send them to him and he may be able to provide some insight.
He explained a lot about their processes and how they make their gear sets, as well as the slightly different approaches they take depending on the ultimate application. Desert racing is different than rock crawling and bouncing, etc.
He also said that a simpler solution may be to go down to a 4.88. Yup, he said it. 2 tooth engagement compared to a one tooth engagement for the 5.38's. The cheaper gears would even hold up better in that setup. This has been discussed on the forum often, and Blaine has weighed in as well, but this guy says the 5.38 setup is definitely a little weaker all other factors being consistent. But, the 5.38's can be made strong enough - given the right metallurgy, treatment, and especially setup. He says the vast majority of his Ultra-4 customers run 5.38's.
I asked him specifically about his cryo-processing, and how he avoids getting too brittle of an end result. He said, "Very good question..." which made me feel good. He then explained how it all works in a way that I understood as he was explaining it, but I certainly could not explain it to someone else. Again, he does sound like he knows his stuff, and has been doing this for a long time.
We talked at length about the shaving process he uses, and how they do it in a way which takes into account avoiding heat building, burring, etc. He says they spend about 8 hours to do it correctly. He asked if I knew how Yukon does it, and I responded that I did not, but he thought for the price they charge they probably throw is on a lathe and hack away at it - possibly destroying the heat treatment in the process. He said that was just a guess on his part, but it could result is a weaker gearset.
Ben also warrants his gears for 5 years assuming a proper setup - which he would help me get to and confirm. He also indicated that he could analyze my failed gearset if I sent them to him, and likely would be able to tell me why they failed. I may take him up on that.
All in all, I really enjoyed the conversation with Ben. Although he recommended several less expensive solutions that he thought would meet my needs, I ultimately decided to go with a set of his race gears. He also offered to work with me on the setup when the times comes.
He was not in his shop during our conversation, but he was going to check if they had anything on the shelf which might reduce the 8-12 week lead time.
It's gonna be expensive, but it appears this may be the best approach to providing the best chance to avoid this happening again.
Outstanding, sounds like you are on your way to a solution.
LG
