- Joined
- February 13, 1999
- Messages
- 7,100
- Reaction score
- 36
- Location
- Tampa, FL
- City, State
- Chief GPS'um and Still Lost Native Texan
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- '99 EB 4x4 "Herc" RIP
I guess Rick jinxed me by putting up that article on the main page stating that no IFS has ever broken yet. I suppose I am the first
:mattmoon: Here ya go, Rick
Dead Link Removed
This happened when I hit a dip on a residential street a little too fast during 28 degree weather last night. You can see the old scrape line on the bar where I always banged it fourwheeling on rocks, and the internal radial stress fracture ring where a particularly hard outside ding exerted stress into the interior of the bar.
I suppose it was waiting for an excuse to break at that deep ding, and the sudden twisting in very cold weather was just the ticket it needed to snap it. I doubt if it would have happened in 80 degree weather.
It's snowing right now as I write this and I am not in the mood to crawl on a freezing wet driveway to R&R a torsion bar, so I will wait until tomorrow to replace it before I move to Anderson, SC. I am beginning to think that God wants me to stay in Texas.
I still don't blame the bar. You all know I have banged the heck out of my Explorer rockcrawling, and you can't change the temper specs of metal and still have it keep the same suspensional properties. To my knowledge I am still the only one of us who has broken one, so unless you really abuse yours I don't anticipate anything that you have to worry about.
However, winter is coming on. Those of you living in colder areas that have wheeled hard and beat up your torsions on rocks might want to take a close look at the dings on them to see how deep they are.

:mattmoon: Here ya go, Rick

Dead Link Removed
This happened when I hit a dip on a residential street a little too fast during 28 degree weather last night. You can see the old scrape line on the bar where I always banged it fourwheeling on rocks, and the internal radial stress fracture ring where a particularly hard outside ding exerted stress into the interior of the bar.
I suppose it was waiting for an excuse to break at that deep ding, and the sudden twisting in very cold weather was just the ticket it needed to snap it. I doubt if it would have happened in 80 degree weather.
It's snowing right now as I write this and I am not in the mood to crawl on a freezing wet driveway to R&R a torsion bar, so I will wait until tomorrow to replace it before I move to Anderson, SC. I am beginning to think that God wants me to stay in Texas.
I still don't blame the bar. You all know I have banged the heck out of my Explorer rockcrawling, and you can't change the temper specs of metal and still have it keep the same suspensional properties. To my knowledge I am still the only one of us who has broken one, so unless you really abuse yours I don't anticipate anything that you have to worry about.
However, winter is coming on. Those of you living in colder areas that have wheeled hard and beat up your torsions on rocks might want to take a close look at the dings on them to see how deep they are.