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Does anyone have a picture of one of the twisted front axle displays that were sent to Ford dealers?
Thanks,
Mike
Mike
Is this the one?

Yes, Dan, that's it. Thanks so much! I wonder if Ford ever did that with a Model A axle. Also, I wonder if this really proves anything since the axle could break with a sharp blow, couldn't it?
Mike
We've seen recent pictures of broken axles, but they had been welded; never seen an original axle broken.
I had an accident where the front axle was pushed over 6 inches back one side so the wishbone was badly bent. The car sat a week or two with the axle twisted back. Once released from the wishbone it popped back into shape and careful checking showed it had gone straight back into its original position; only the wishbone needed work.
I wonder what would cause an axle to break in the first place.
It would take a real whack to break an axle in my mind but I guess anything is possible.
Hey don't forgot that John Walton broke an axle on is truck by hitting a chuck hole
Mike
The picture illustrates how ductile the vanadium steel was and it should show the strength of the material.
However - as the members of the two-part crank club have experienced the hard way - there are many other parameters than just ductility. Resistance to metal fatigue for example.
Metallurgy have evolved a great deal since and we understand better what happens on the molecular level thanks to electron microscopes.
Ford did indeed pioneered the use of metallurgy in automotive design, but they just haven't revealed all the secrets.
Very interesting! Before someone points it out, John Walton's truck was an "A." And we all know that T's are far superior
Mike
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