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MAGN1T wrote:A TRD crank has TRD pressed into it as part of the manufacturing process which is done with hydraulic presses.
Billet cranks have the ID either engraved or etched into them.
All of those pics I posted of "steel " cranks have the letters "cast" into them.
Steve
MAGN1T wrote:If you're machining a crank on a lathe (Billet) then the counterweights tend to come out round rather than flat sides of the TRD which would require more work.
4agtepwr wrote:I agree with fivebob on that one, I'm pretty sure you will find that that TRD crank is machined from a solid billet and then heat treated and normalized and then finish ground, its very hard to forge something as intricate as a five journal main four cylinder crank let alone a straight six or bigger, there's a fairly big difference between forged and billet although it seems to be a common mistake, but If i were a betting man and you chopped that crank up and xrayed it the grain structure would all run straight along the axis of the crank instead of following the shape.
4agtepwr wrote:I couldn't bring my self to do it haha, What does it weigh out of interest?
4agtepwr wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p4amaa6MpVY
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