Astala3
Member
That's all folks!
I'm done with this nonsense. I'm gonna go grab a shower with my hot wife.
I'm done with this nonsense. I'm gonna go grab a shower with my hot wife.
I already stated the purpose for the addition. I will expound on it though.
I wrecked my jeep. Tore up the front axle. Got a killer deal on a parts jeep. $200 for a HP Dana 30 and an 8.8 with ARB air locker, 4.56 gears for my 33" rubber. That donor jeep is a YJ. I used the truss kits to solve the problem of not having spring buckets or any of the of the appropriate brackets to mount on my jeep. I also used the truss kit because I like the look. Putting them on my jeep solves the problem of not having that look. It's really that simple. Adding the truss kits solved those problems.
The only problem left is you assuming our intended use of them. I used them to solve those problems, not the problems that you are assuming every truss runner is trying to overcome. The more mostest mostiest mostly immediate problem that I had was a wrecked jeep no way to mount two awesome axles. Again, the trusses solved that problem for me. TAH DAH truss kits do solve problems after all!
I caught that edit too! HA and there you go again! The classic "one upper" at it again. so graciously allowing me extra credit. give It up already!
You've got to be trolling at this point dude. This is next level shit. Now you are relying on me not being able to pinpoint where you said it because you know you only implied it. You're not just sneaky dude, its like snake level reasoning and behaviors at this point. Again, I'm happy to oblige.
Your words "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." Before you continue on trying to snake your way around the implication, I'll address that too! If you weren't implying that the weight adds to stress on the weak link, then why is better to not weld something? What else could possibly be the reason for not doing it when all your reasoning is so focused on the weakest link. If you are in fact not implying that it further weakens them then there is absolutely no reason not to add truss kits. Without the very implication that you are denying, your entire objection to truss kits is dead on its face.
Once we address the issue on a factory axle of the ball joints falling out of the stretched yokes, the value of a truss may increase.
The conflict with that premise is that the tire size where this stretching tends to accelerate is also the tire size where bigger wider axles ought to be considered as a matter of function. Use the appropriate axles for the tire size and multiple other issues of strength are addressed as a result, including any need for trusses.
That's all folks!
I'm done with this nonsense. I'm gonna go grab a shower with my hot wife.
I'll relate my own truss or not to truss story while fully understanding that you won't learn anything
Whose, mine or his? I know I expect things to improve and the communal knowledge pool to grow, I'm rarely not disappointed.Isn't that the definition of insanity?
Ever wonder why I stepped over my self described line of hypocrisy and put a "truss" on the Savvy mid arm?I will say that I know I, along with many others, really appreciate the insight! So please don't ever stop doing this because you think someone might not be wanting to understand![]()
Ever wonder why I stepped over my self described line of hypocrisy and put a "truss" on the Savvy mid arm?
The long side stiffener is purely there so I don't have to talk about why I didn't do it. The mini truss over the pumpkin needs nothing else to do the job that the original cast mount was doing except doubling that which is does easily due to the design and way too much metal thrown at it. If I wasn't concerned about access to the breather and electrical ports, I could have dropped a tight fitting to the casting flange down on the rear face and reduced the material thickness by half. It is easier to throw metal at it.We've had that conversation here. Looking at the design and trying to determine the "why", my thought was that since it goes to a 3 link, all the force now goes to the single upper mount. Adding some strength would make sense. The original UCA mount mechanically ties it to the pumpkin, which gives it longitudinal strength. The truss then makes sense to give it the lateral strength, but for the mount itself, not for the tubes.
At least that's what I can come up with.
Whose, mine or his? I know I expect things to improve and the communal knowledge pool to grow, I'm rarely not disappointed.
Ever wonder why I stepped over my self described line of hypocrisy and put a "truss" on the Savvy mid arm?
That's right, it was easier than spending endless amounts of time arguing about why it wasn't necessary. Easier to design and add it than deal with the why I didn't.
If the weld to the tube at the right side of the truss isn't enough, the stiffener isn't going to solve that problem. The truss being cut around the two lower halves of the cast boss is not an accident. The forces on the truss base are fore and aft at the basic level and then as they increase, they become rotational trying to tilt the base of the UCA up and down. In order for the mount to rotate, it has to stretch the flanged side plates that go over to the spring mount on the left and the axle tube on the right. That won't happen easily and the flanges prevent deflection of the large flat areas.I assumed (there’s that word) it was because the new single UCA mount was not in quite the original location because of geometry. So because it was no longer integrated into the diff housing, it needed the longer “mini-truss” to strengthen the attachment, not the tube. Also, a 2.5” JJ wouldn’t fit in the housing hole.
How did you verify that you did not bend the axles after the truss install?
Same still applies though. You would have to be a complete moron to truss that axle. If you feel the need to truss an axle, you don't have enough axle.
You concerns about weakness are valid but adding a truss to a Dana30 will not improve real world durability as the tubes are not what fails on a trail ride. You’ll generally break almost everything else first.
I've fixed a couple of bent Dana 30 and Dana 44 TJ front housings for bent long side tubes. All of them happened in rolls. Had the tube not bent, the C probably would have and I'm not even going to try and fix that.i have 3 bent dana 30’s, 2 were bent tubes, 1 was a bent C, and I have a bent 44 that was a C
I've fixed a couple of bent Dana 30 and Dana 44 TJ front housings for bent long side tubes. All of them happened in rolls. Had the tube not bent, the C probably would have and I'm not even going to try and fix that.
I've fixed a couple of bent Dana 30 and Dana 44 TJ front housings for bent long side tubes. All of them happened in rolls. Had the tube not bent, the C probably would have and I'm not even going to try and fix that.
How do you check for straightness, Blaine?
How do you check for straightness, Blaine?
I wasn’t saying to truss the 44, but there are factory options that were factory that are more stout than the newer ones, just a comparison
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Two words: concentric circles
Edit two things: #1, I know I'm not Blaine, and #2, watching your method was cool
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Concentric circles. But, be very aware that very few of them were straight from the factory. EGCS found that out the hard way when they bought up as many stock Dana 44 TJ front housings as they could get their hands on. During a chat, the owner related that an alignment bar showed almost none of them were what we would call acceptable.
At the end of the day, you decorated the Jeep with trusses. Got it!
Meanwhile, the rest of us are having a technical discussion of function, purpose and design.
