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This post contains information I received verbally from a lawyer reportedly involved in a lawsuit against General Motors in the 1990's regarding a manufacturing defect in the rear axle shafts used in the M1009. This post is NOT intended to spark a debate on ANYTHING! This post is intended to advise M1009 owners to check for wear in a part that will be a safety issue if not corrected!
The story as told to me is:
Soldier #1, who was known to be a very reckless sort and abusive to Government Property, was driving an M1009 on Ft.Hood (on duty) with soldiers #2 and #3 as passengers. Soldier #1 was bashing the M1009 too hard at great speed when one of the rear axle shafts with wheel and hub attached came loose at the differential and started coming out of the axle housing, broke, sending the wheel off and causing the M1009 to flip end over end. The result was one fatality and two serious injuries.
Examination determined the cause of the separation was wear on the axle shaft inboard of the retaining clip resulting in the thinning of the shaft to the point that the clip no longer had a groove to ride in and no longer retained the axle in place. The shaft was found to have not been properly heat treated in the manufacturing process.
The lawsuit process was begun against General Motors but was abandoned when it was determined the US Government had final approval on the M1009 design due to requested design changes in the K5 Blazer and so the liability fell on the US Government's shoulders.
The one (and ONLY) moral to this story is: inspect your axle shafts for wear!
that is all...
The story as told to me is:
Soldier #1, who was known to be a very reckless sort and abusive to Government Property, was driving an M1009 on Ft.Hood (on duty) with soldiers #2 and #3 as passengers. Soldier #1 was bashing the M1009 too hard at great speed when one of the rear axle shafts with wheel and hub attached came loose at the differential and started coming out of the axle housing, broke, sending the wheel off and causing the M1009 to flip end over end. The result was one fatality and two serious injuries.
Examination determined the cause of the separation was wear on the axle shaft inboard of the retaining clip resulting in the thinning of the shaft to the point that the clip no longer had a groove to ride in and no longer retained the axle in place. The shaft was found to have not been properly heat treated in the manufacturing process.
The lawsuit process was begun against General Motors but was abandoned when it was determined the US Government had final approval on the M1009 design due to requested design changes in the K5 Blazer and so the liability fell on the US Government's shoulders.
The one (and ONLY) moral to this story is: inspect your axle shafts for wear!
that is all...