New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
Possibly the casting is being pushed to it's limits off road and any slight structural flaw during manufacture can result in cracking.
This part would be impossible to forge in one piece. The Aprilia swing arms appear to be extruded in several pieces, then welded.
This part would be impossible to forge in one piece. The Aprilia swing arms appear to be extruded in several pieces, then welded.Galvanic corrosion- I don't think so. You would see the threads packed with aluminum oxide. Honestly, I think that the hole was an add on that was drilled and tapped after designing the plug for the mold. The hole is in the bold face of the casting- so it really is a weak spot- or at least an anomaly- in the rest of the surface. Normally, you'd have a thickened section, or boss, which then would be drilled and tapped. It's very hard to predict fatigue and it doesn't mean all units must fail in order to be a design issue. The onset of fracture initiation can be a real coin toss. So Doug- tell me you didn't rush up to the garage and shimmy under your bike to check your swing arm??? :)
So far it hasn't happened in the USA (?) because I doubt the NTSA would overlook it in the current climate. Do we know if any of the failures have been reported to government agencies? Perhaps the reports have gone only to dealers. If the dealer takes care of it in some handshake agreement with the factory, it wouldn't go past that would it?
NTSA expects failures to be reported by owners of the failed vehicle. Do you really think a dealer or mfg. is going to let NTSA know every time they have a failure? No customer complaints, no interest by the NTSA.
I agree, not practical.It would be an easy thing to add a rib, or just more metal, near that highly stress point.
Nope. Not yet. May glance at it tomorrow when I get to work, but honestly, if it hasn't failed yet in the 63,000 miles of crap I've put it through, it probably isn't going to.
There are a lot of factors at play here. Nobody has mentioned resonant frequency. It's most likely a combination of a number of factors that all combine to cause a failure; casting variables (pour temp, inclusions, insufficient venting), hole drilling and tapping, base metal, load (static load, cyclic load, torsion).It may be that a washboard road set up a resonant frequency to start the crack. The road could appear and in fact be "a mild gravel road" without large pot holes but the 3 cases may have just hit the right combination of load and vibration to reveal a potential problem.
Their best bet is to figure it out, issue clear communications to owners of all Stelvio or those bike models that use the same swingarm explaining the problem, solution and costs to owners if any.
Or preload adjustment. If the preload is not set properly, and the shock is being bottomed out, that might add a lot of impact type stress. I found the spring on the stock 2009 pretty weak when loaded.
None of my points in that post even hinted that the dealers or anyone but the owners would or should report the incidents. The point you missed was that there could possibly be other failures but depending on how they were handled, no one but the owner, dealer and factory would know. After all, not all Stelvio owners read or participate on this forum and if a cracked swingarm was simply replaced by the dealer with factory supplied parts, that owner might not report it at all. Thus, there could be failures that did happen, did not get reported and no one would hear about it.Read what I wrote once more, it will become clear.
And what triple Jim says about safety factor leads up to perhaps poor engineering.....Unl ess the bike is making insane stunt jumps no kind of road going abuse should cause such a failure..
It could be poor engineering or it could be flaws in the castings that result in the part being 1/3 as strong as the engineer(s) expected it to be (for example). It's really all speculation until a real analysis is done.If this were happening to an engineering design I was responsible for, I'd probably be building a test rig to do dynamic testing on every assembly before it's put into use, at least until the cause of the problem is determined and a solution found.
All hypothetical of course, if the test rig revealed that the swingarms had defects and were used across multiple models but only one model had shown in actual use failures, is the appropriate solution to fix only the models where they are anticipated to be used in similar conditions as the failed representatives or do you apply the fix to the entire mix regardless of application?
I understand that aluminium will crack when holes have flash left around the edges. The edges of holes need to be smoorthly chamfered.The earliest incident related to this is possibly the disastrous failure of pressure skins on the 50s De Havilland Comet Jetliners, which mysteriously fell out of the sky after some use. After 6 months testing in an over-sized bath tub ;-) they found a crack appeared at a hole used for mounting a window frame, and traced the cause to the hole having not been cleaned around after drilling.
This conversation is what happens when men give up all hope of getting laid.
Or have hope, do care and work hard toward the goal only to realize the deep breathes are those of deep sleep.
Hmmm, is it my imagination or is that different to the pics on the first page posted by Green1000s? I agree, don't see why a tapped hole is required, unless that little plastic clip somehow screws in? Intriguing.Could we have some more pictures by Stelvio owners, please!
The plastic clip has threads more or less but is simply pushed into the whole.