MaxPF said:
.190" is a substantial difference in strength. It gives the D60 shaft 40% more area than the D44/10b stub, and is therefore 40-45% stronger.
I was going to post something along this line. Also keep in mind that the increased splines (30 vs. 19) and the increased length of the Dana 60 stub make it much stronger in real life than a 10-bolt or D44 stub.
I chose to replace my stock 30-spline stubs with the Yukon chromo 35-spline stubs even though I had regular Spicer inners and u-joints. Why?? Well because it only cost an extra $50 to get the Yukons, so why not. I also did not see the reason the get Spicer stubs because of the yoke issue (ears stretch out over time), and even though the 35-spline stubs are the same dia. and spline count they still are much shorter than the inner axles and therefore need to be a stronger material to hold up as well.
For breakage, again I broke 2 30-spline Spicer stubs and the only damage was that they trashed the spindle bearing. Granted they could have caused other issues (like trashing the spindle) but obviously bigger issues don't alway occur.
Also along those lines, people can say "run the stock stuff and just replace it on the trail when it breaks"...........obviously these guys have never regularly had to replace a certain component because fixing a rig on the trail sucks, and it sucks for everybody in your group as they sit around waiting on you. Sure, if you are playing in the mud or someplace to can easily run back to camp and fix while the others keep running it's not a big deal, but most of the trails I have been on it stops the whole group and it's no fun for anyone.
For "weak points" in a vehicle, I guess it just depends on what each individual person opinion is on the subject. I personally don't seen any reason to intentional design in a weak point, but you should also know what the "weakest" point (or the part most likely to break first) is and plan accordingly. If you have a "weakest" part that fails every once in awhile than that's just part of the game, if you have a true weak point that breaks and you have to repair every trailride then that just sucks and you should upgrade or stay home. There have been people in our club that broke the same part almost every trailride......needless to say nobody wants to trailride with that person anymore. Maybe a more accurate explanation is that if you KNOW a part will definitely break, than you need to do something about it.