And Im done feeding the troll![]()
Stopped feeding it long ago. What a waste of time.

And Im done feeding the troll![]()


So are you saying that we are supposed to take a torch to every weld we do and anneal it? My buddy works for DAKE press and they build massive h presses. On a 300 ton press that stands over 25' tall and weighs many tons do you think they are going to put that in a heat treat oven after its all welded together? No, they weld it, let the welds cool on there own, not quenching in water or anything that would result in hardening, and then put 300 tons of pressure on that frame and yah know what? They dont break![]()
Do they make those out of 1/8" steel? Didn't think so : )

Annealing is a very long process that isnt cheap either. The steel must be heated up to the upper transformation temperature, then slowly brought down in temperature over hours to truly releive all stress. Would it make the welds and frame much stronger? Oh hell yah, but think of the amount of time and money wasted on that process, that nobody ever does around here, and most have no problems. If your throwing water at your hot welds to cool them down... Then yah $hits gonna be brittle and crack.
Do they have 300 tons of force against them? Yes.
Honestly, this is what makes this forum and others like pirate laughable...everyone is an expert lol
You can only tell someone they're wrong so many times before you just have to let them find out on their own.
For those of you who still don't get it, I think you need to question your ability to take on a project like this, and actually do it properly.
Like I said before, there are time-tested ways of welding to frame to prevent vertical cracks from welding heat...why are these in use if they're not needed?
If you take an unbiased look at both sides of the argument, you'll see that one side (my side) is supported with facts n theory...take a look at the other side, no facts, no theory, just opinions.
By no means am I saying I know everything, and by no means am I saying you should take my word for it. just do some research...stress risers are a very real, very dangerous thing. That's why there are (or should be) certain ways to go about sticking something to your frame.
If you "fabricators" cannot do the research to build a vehicle safely, then why bother modifying it in the first place?
Have fun with your second rate fab and your death machine.

your like PETA.. I used to somewhat take your side of the argument with stress risers, but your such a self-righteous douche, I'm automatically gonna hate ya and argue with ya... CONGRATS!
funny how you come in and question everyone here's fab abilities and calling everyone unsafe hacks, yet you're automatically some condescending expert... who apparently can't weld for sh*t yourself cuz YOUR stuff failed.. again congrats!
enjoy your travels around the intraweb....![]()
cuz your not sharing, you came in badmouthing us and being condescending....
prove me wrong and be a useful polite member for a while and I may change my mind, until than, your just another interweb arse...
I was nothing but polite and helpful until some ck5 members were less than polite to me. I'm talking about trucks, you guys are taking personal shots at me...of course I'm gonna give it back
Stress risers/frame welding
Wow, long thread with little to no useful info...
Seeing as how this never got resolved i figured I'd bring it up again.
Whether or not our trucks see enough stress to make these stress risers break is beside the point. There is a correct way to do this.
As for the pissing contest, I'd give the win to fab...not only was he correct but he proved it by bringing up stress risers, while KJ had only opinions .


To give you all an idea of why the frame did crack in the center...
This truck has a blown BB chevy and 30" wide slicks. Runs low 8's.
Cracks got rewelded when the cage and 4 link went in, haven't had any more problems, I feel due to the cage stiffening the twisting and front to back flex that all ladder framed vehicles have.