s219
Super Member
- Joined
- Dec 7, 2011
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- 8,548
- Location
- Virginia USA
- Tractor
- Kubota L3200, Deere X380, Kubota RTV-X
The reason I made that video a couple years ago is because there had been a string of threads about people breaking their stabilizers, and it was obvious the damage was caused by putting the stabilizer in compression. When properly adjusted, they should never experience compression, and that type of damage wouldn't even be possible. I am sure there are other ways to damage them though.
If you look up the specs of a turnbuckle in a mechanical design handbook or catalog, you will see they are almost always rated for tension load only. If a compression rating is given, it's much much lower (order of magnitude lower). The shape is very strong in tension, but in compression they have very little resistance to buckling.
If you look up the specs of a turnbuckle in a mechanical design handbook or catalog, you will see they are almost always rated for tension load only. If a compression rating is given, it's much much lower (order of magnitude lower). The shape is very strong in tension, but in compression they have very little resistance to buckling.