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This is a connection to a tow bar f

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gondola993

Electrical
Joined
Apr 8, 2012
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26
Location
US
This is a connection to a tow bar for towing a car behind a motorhome. I don't have any additional pics. Here's the bar: Link. This is all the information I have. How would you say the forces contributing to this failure occurred: Axially, vertically, or laterally (hard turn left or right), etc. I guess I'm asking, can you read the pattern of the break on the spherical end to tell me anything about what caused the break? Thanks.

aventaFailure_tr8yqb.jpg
 
This is what I would expect from jackknifing the trailer. The easiest way to to that without much drama is while backing up.
 
Hard to say from this one photograph but it looks like the failure was from overload under shear forces.
 
With better photos we could at least tell which direction force was being applied.

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
P.E. Metallurgy, Plymouth Tube
 
Thanks everyone. Sorry I don't have any more info or pics to share. I use the same bar and was hoping to learn how to avoid whatever caused this failure. My friend has a different style bar and he recently had a failure. This failure I know was caused by a high vertical load because the receiver inserted into the towing vehicle bent downward 0.5". What I don't know is if there were any cracks developing in the T6 aluminum prior to the complete fracture. Any thoughts?

You can get a magnified image over here:Link


blueOxFailure_qmsizh.jpg
 
Is this item welded? The lower photo shows a linear failure that looks like it might be a weld. There is also a crack evident on the drilled face on the left.

What alloy of aluminum is used? You mentioned T6 which is the temper, but not the allow.

I would question the use of aluminum in this application because of the fatigue potential.....yes, I know that aluminum is used for airframes and other fatigue applications; however, those items are fabricated under stringent criteria....I doubt that is true of a hitch manufacturer.
 
No idea what aluminum is used; if it helps I believe it's cast and advertised as aircraft grade. The bar is of this design: Link. The first joint pivots about the x-axis, the second about the z, and the third about the y.
 
I agree with CompositePro....looks like jacknifing would cause this. Dynamic tensile failure on the right side.
 
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