We want people to learn. The push back comes in cases like this one where it is better to not weld something, despite knowing how to. It becomes an exercise in restraint.
Allow me to challenge that thought a bit. As I understand it, you are of the belief that the truss causes more stress than it does provide strength. Have you personally ever ran a trussed axle? How did that axle fail? What exactly did you do that caused something to fail?
With those 3 answers in mind, have you ever hit that very same line on the trail, with like conditions and at the same speed, on an axle that was not trussed?
NO, it is nearly impossible to do so. You can't have two axles that have been through all the same crap and abuse come on the same trail and take an obstacle in exactly the same fashion. There are too many variables, not to mention every abusive maneuver made before the fail.
The truss kit I added is far more stout than others I've seen. I think it was like 60 lbs or near there. To suggest 60 additional pounds is going to over stress anything is wild. If these jeeps are that weak than we'd better not take any passengers on the trail. Better not have retardedly over built bumpers. Better not have extra body armor. Heck, if you are right, we better not take a trail with full tank of gas. 96lbs in a full tank! Come to think of it, I better drop my spare at the start of the trail.
I'm sorry. This is an internet thing. Everyone is their own wizard. Everyone knows everything best, without ever actually having done anything. Maybe you had a bad experience with a truss. That genuinely sucks. The fact remains that there is absolutely no way that you can definitively determine the truss to be the culprit. I can curl my truss kit, one handed, but you would everybody believe that my jeep cant handle it. Come on man, really!
I am sorry to come at this so strongly. I don't doubt that you probably have a great deal of knowledge on these jeeps. This isn't that though. This is a freaking internet echo chamber catastrophe. Two bulky truss kits weigh less than a single fat kid!