Are you serious? How can you possibly attest to even the idea of what broke first? Do you have some special kind of SuperMan-like x-ray vision that can see into solid metal, even when its on a you-tube video? You're obviously an intelligent guy, but c'mon...the Chinese locker is totalled and the axel splines are slightly twisted. That is a standard Toyota axel. Daisy(Tom) on this forum used to break those at will in his moon buggy with ARBs.KiwiBacon wrote:Did you not watch the video?Micka wrote:Can we please make this thread a sticky cause there is some funny, pathetic, idiotic shit contained in these 5 pages?
Who wouldn't want a cheap, totally inferior locker that can't outlast a standard axel?
Me.
The cheap locker did outlast the axle they tested it with, check out the twisted splines.
That axle is toast, yes the locker broke too but it killed the axle first.
I have personally used an axel with far more twist in the splines than that for a year's worth of Rock Crawling comps, and as far as I know, that same axel is still going in the same buggy. And that is a chromo axel from McNamara. ARB was like new.
At the end of the day, IMHO, it all comes down to experience. Do you want the experience of breaking an axel and stil being able to drive home and only have to replace an axel? Or does pulling the entire diff down on the side of a trail and having to relace axels, the locker cause it failed hopelessly and probably the CW&P sound better?
Axels are far cheaper than a new locker, installation, axels and possibly a CW&P.
Each to their own.