Well, I can't speak for "most", but I can say I had no loose bolts (full inspection before the run), new mounts, and shafts that could not have bottomed. I also had a skid plate that fully covered the entire transfer case stack and the tail of the transmission, so no impact damage. I do agree that most breakage is from bottomed shafts or impacts on cases that hang down, but I don't think that was the case with mine.
But, I suppose it could have been a cumulative thing... I did hit the case before I ran my current skid and stripped the bolts out of the back of the transmission. When I heli-coiled them back, there was no sign of other damage, cracks or otherwise…
Also, just before mine broke, I has "getting it" on a large waterfall, bouncing and getting air under all 4 tires. So with 4.5 psi in 42" tires, double low range, add in bouncing around under heavy throttle with the tires coming down and being wrapped around rocks while spinning, and I'm sure you can see that the torque load would be pretty high. Street trucks don't experience those shock loads since the tires break loose long before the numbers get that high.
I'm not sure about the inertial swaging theory in my case either, other than fatigue. My rig was near vertical during this, so most of the inertial loads were along the length of the assembly, no perpendicular to it.
But, I suppose it could have been a cumulative thing... I did hit the case before I ran my current skid and stripped the bolts out of the back of the transmission. When I heli-coiled them back, there was no sign of other damage, cracks or otherwise…
Also, just before mine broke, I has "getting it" on a large waterfall, bouncing and getting air under all 4 tires. So with 4.5 psi in 42" tires, double low range, add in bouncing around under heavy throttle with the tires coming down and being wrapped around rocks while spinning, and I'm sure you can see that the torque load would be pretty high. Street trucks don't experience those shock loads since the tires break loose long before the numbers get that high.
I'm not sure about the inertial swaging theory in my case either, other than fatigue. My rig was near vertical during this, so most of the inertial loads were along the length of the assembly, no perpendicular to it.