• Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!

  • Microsoft MSN, Live, Hotmail, Outlook email users may not be receiving emails. We are working to resolve this issue. Please add support@steelsoldiers.com to your trusted contacts.

Design flaws? Torque rod, split rims?

Status
Not open for further replies.

doghead

4 Star General /Moderator
Staff member
Super Moderator
Steel Soldiers Supporter
26,246
1,179
113
Location
NY
Unless your parts are new and went bad, how can you call it a flaw?

Are you a suspension design engineer as well as a truck driver?
 

porkysplace

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
9,604
1,493
113
Location
mid- michigan
Sorry guys my lack of proper teminology. 2 piece rim. It's not leaking at the tube going into the rim, when I spray it into the hole around the tube I start getting bubbles. The seal between the two piece rim has a very slow leak. Takes two or three days to deflate.
Have you replaced the 20 year old tires the military had on it or the 20 year old o-ring between the rim halfs rubber dry rots over time ?

As for OTR trucks have you driven one with wore out bushings in the walking beams they will travel far enough to rub the tires on the frame and if bad enough cause tire blow-outs.
 

1 Patriot-of-many

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
2,186
86
48
Location
Zimmerman MN
so does the older MV suspension, the springs and pocket take care of the side to side movement, and the torque rods take care of the roll and front to back movement , you loose a torque rod (strut) on a modern truck, look what your axle does, at times it goes where no axle has gone before.
Not talking about older MV system, talking about now. W'ere only talking about 11 years.
Normal truck
http://imageserv8.team-logic.com/store-logic/categories/5/778/532.jpg

You have the leaf spring with two contact points, and the middle supported by 4 bolts with possibly some torque bars. With the M35, you have a reversed leaf spring, NO contact points other than the spring pressure and one or two torque bars. The design is inherently less stable and susceptible to catastrophic failure
 

1 Patriot-of-many

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
2,186
86
48
Location
Zimmerman MN
Have you replaced the 20 year old tires the military had on it or the 20 year old o-ring between the rim halfs rubber dry rots over time ?

As for OTR trucks have you driven one with wore out bushings in the walking beams they will travel far enough to rub the tires on the frame and if bad enough cause tire blow-outs.
Tires are good. Sprayed soapy water around all tubes inlets including from the rear side of the rim. When I spray into the hole through the rim I get bubbles.
 

hndrsonj

Senior Chief/Moderator
Super Moderator
Steel Soldiers Supporter
7,584
363
83
Location
Cheyenne, WY
Not talking about older MV system, talking about now. W'ere only talking about 11 years.
Normal truck
http://imageserv8.team-logic.com/store-logic/categories/5/778/532.jpg

You have the leaf spring with two contact points, and the middle supported by 4 bolts with possibly some torque bars. With the M35, you have a reversed leaf spring, NO contact points other than the spring pressure and one or two torque bars. The design is inherently less stable and susceptible to catastrophic failure
Are you saying having 4 leaf springs in back? Have you seen the m35 articulation at full deflection? It's pretty impressive in my opinion. Personally, I have never heard of a failure except on older torque rods.
 

1 Patriot-of-many

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
2,186
86
48
Location
Zimmerman MN
Are you saying having 4 leaf springs in back? Have you seen the m35 articulation at full deflection? It's pretty impressive in my opinion. Personally, I have never heard of a failure except on older torque rods.
Okay so they failed to find the A3 rod about to fail with 5,000 miles on it?
Still doesn't address my point. You have ONE point of contact with the leaf spring leaving all kinds of failure prone issues.
 

doghead

4 Star General /Moderator
Staff member
Super Moderator
Steel Soldiers Supporter
26,246
1,179
113
Location
NY
How do do know it really has only 5000 miles on it? Suppose that torque rod is original to your 40 year old chassis?

Rubber deteriorates. The design is not flawed.

You didn't answer my questions posted above.


Are you always paranoid?
 

porkysplace

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
9,604
1,493
113
Location
mid- michigan
How do do know it really has only 5000 miles on it? Suppose that torque rod is original to your 40 year old chassis?

Rubber deteriorates. The design is not flawed.

You didn't answer my questions posted above.


Are you always paranoid?
He must have stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night .

He also hasn't ansewerd if the o-rings have been replaced .
 
Last edited:

1 Patriot-of-many

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
2,186
86
48
Location
Zimmerman MN
How do do know it really has only 5000 miles on it? Suppose that torque rod is original to your 40 year old chassis?

Rubber deteriorates. The design is not flawed.

You didn't answer my questions posted above.


Are you always paranoid?
Suppose I was an engineer? I've built a lot of things, the design is non-redundant. Doesn't take an idiot to see that. One failure leads to catastrophic failure of your brake lines leading to death or injury.

Paranoid enough to understand you have access enough to change my sig line, which you have. So you have access to everything I post on this site. My IP even. Paranoid? No, realistic.
 

1 Patriot-of-many

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
2,186
86
48
Location
Zimmerman MN
Have you replaced the 20 year old tires the military had on it or the 20 year old o-ring between the rim halfs rubber dry rots over time ?

As for OTR trucks have you driven one with wore out bushings in the walking beams they will travel far enough to rub the tires on the frame and if bad enough cause tire blow-outs.
Well I don't think the tires are 20 years old considering the truck was rebuilt in 1998. I wish, cause then I wouldn't have to pay half the registration cost.
 

doghead

4 Star General /Moderator
Staff member
Super Moderator
Steel Soldiers Supporter
26,246
1,179
113
Location
NY
Still not answering my questions....
 

ODdave

New member
3,213
41
0
Location
lansing michigan
I am confused, Thought you said you drove truck. Semi right? Your semi has leaf springs? If i where you i would be more worried about your $ making truck. Havent seen an OTR truck that did NOT have air bag suspention in quite some time.
 

doghead

4 Star General /Moderator
Staff member
Super Moderator
Steel Soldiers Supporter
26,246
1,179
113
Location
NY
One thing you may be overlooking. These trucks were never made to federal saftey standards for civilian on road use.

They are special purpose built military trucks.
 

1 Patriot-of-many

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
2,186
86
48
Location
Zimmerman MN
How do do know it really has only 5000 miles on it? Suppose that torque rod is original to your 40 year old chassis?

Rubber deteriorates. The design is not flawed.

You didn't answer my questions posted above.


Are you always paranoid?
Don't other than the odometer and the minty condition of the truck. I would find that odd on an A3.

Just because you say the design isn't flawed doesn't make it so. It is if you look at subjectively at it.
 

doghead

4 Star General /Moderator
Staff member
Super Moderator
Steel Soldiers Supporter
26,246
1,179
113
Location
NY
The whole truck is flawed in hundreds of ways, if you look at it subjectively.
 

ODdave

New member
3,213
41
0
Location
lansing michigan
Personaly i have never had anything close to a rim or torque rod faill. I think i have heard of 1 or 2 rods fail, non catastrofic as they where off road twisting the truck up. I think you would be better off finding a economical cure to duramax injectors or 6.0 head gaskets
 

1 Patriot-of-many

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
2,186
86
48
Location
Zimmerman MN
One thing you may be overlooking. These trucks were never made to federal saftey standards for civilian on road use.

They are special purpose built military trucks.
This broke in my yard driving over gopher mounds in the back yard. Seriously? Special built military trucks to the lowest bidder. The fact that one rod failure will cause you to have brake failure speaks volumes. POOR design. How can you argue that? Put a steel shield over the brake line if the rod comes off or breaks.

That's the point. It's a poor design. I thought these trucks would be better built and better designed, They're not.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website like our supporting vendors. Their ads help keep Steel Soldiers going. Please consider disabling your ad blockers for the site. Thanks!

I've Disabled AdBlock
No Thanks