SOCOMech
Famous Raptor
I'm starting to lean towards the combination of the shocks fading and extra weight in the vehicle......and still maybe some one-upmanship
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my understanding of steel (vs. aluminum) is that its ability to retain its shape is NOT effected by cumulative loading with loads less than its permanent bending value. I'm using the wrong terms here to describe this attribute of steel, there's a much cleaner/scientific way of saying it.
Here is another thought I just had. I know there are a few guys who are talking about getting this fixed under warranty. I am not 100% sure if I'm right about about this or not, but if Ford fixes this under warranty, isn't there is a dam good change that will show up down the road on a CarFax report as frame damage? And if so, resale of your truck will go straight to shit. I would think it would be best just too handle this at the offroad shop level with boxing the rear, and not a dealer level who reports this kind of thing.
I could be way off, but I would hate to see some of you guys end up going to sell the truck down the road and scrambling over come a frame damage report.
That's an outstanding point!!
Very curious to know more about what happened here. Is there any pattern whatsoever to the failures, I'd really be curious to know some of the following:
- How many trucks went, how many were damaged?
- Of the trucks that were damaged, were there variations in the degree of damage or in the failure itself?
- How were the damaged trucks configured? Deavers? Perch setting? Load (passengers and items, center of mass of load?) Other suspension modifications? Tire brand/model, size and weight (and wheel size/weight)?
- Behavior of drivers of damaged vs. non-damaged trucks: did more aggressive driving make a significant difference?
- Crew cabs vs. extended cabs? Crew cabs have a greater moment of inertia, i.e., there should be more load through this point. The crew CAB structure (not frame structure) is more rigid, but the failure point is aft of the cab, correct? The crews also have higher rear spring rates.
- Were the trucks behaving differently later in the run, i.e., was the suspension becoming firmer/softer?
I'm the farthest thing from a metallurgist, but my understanding of steel (vs. aluminum) is that its ability to retain its shape is NOT effected by cumulative loading with loads less than its permanent bending value. I'm using the wrong terms here to describe this attribute of steel, there's a much cleaner/scientific way of saying it. What I'm indicating here though is that a SINGLE EVENT load was placed on the frame to cause it to bend, at least initially. After that additional lesser loads may have exaggerated the problem, but it requires a single event to initiate the bend.
If this happened a year and a half ago, I'd be a lot less surprised. But at this point these are the first Raptors I've heard of that have taken such damage from anything but a single, notable, obvious high-impact event. Ford beat the shit out of these things in testing, as have hundreds of other people on fairly long duration runs. Did the Baja trucks receive any significant frame modifications?
This looks a hell of a lot more severe:
And as an aside, what caused the front suspension failure on one truck? Was that a specific severe impact or did symptoms develop during the drive before it came apart?
F-150 SVT Raptor features standard front internal triple bypass FOX Racing Shox that provide position-sensitive damping, delivering traction, stability and comfort.
Disclosures
Closed course. Professional Driver. Obey all laws. Respect the environment. Know your vehicle, the course and the required equipment before high-speed off-roading.