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That makes sense. The metal would probably get fatigued from 40 years of vibrations, no mater what. Maybe it is just something that should be changed out every few decades. Ti is even more brittle than stainless so it could potentially suffer from the same problems.Stainless works and is proven and widely available. Carbon fiber is not proven, often laid up by hand, and I have broken an expensive carbon fiber whisker pole twice (its great quality is lightness, which is uneccessary in this applicaton.) I'm against titanium too, I see it as overkill.
That is one heck of a scary failure. It may result from the bend in the metal (such hardware is usually cold-bent by the fabricator), which might introduce unforeseen molecular issues. My crack was exacerbated by misalignment by the factory, I think.
But in the end, it's just a hunk of stainless that went bad over time, and personally I would replace it with a new hunk of stainless good for the next 40 years.
I took a close look at my backstay chainplate today and am happy to say that it looks fault-free. But I find it interesting that, of three different failed pieces described here, the failure occurred at either the top or next lower bolt hole. So it seems like those other four (4!) bolts may look like serious security, but they in fact do nothing useful. I don't know enough to be specific, but it seems like a design deficiency to me. If I had occasion to do anything with mine, I think I would drill out the holes through the transom for a close, unthreaded fit for the bolts so the tang and the backing plate could float a bit to spread the load through the whole piece.It may result from the bend in the metal (such hardware is usually cold-bent by the fabricator), which might introduce unforeseen molecular issues. My crack was exacerbated by misalignment by the factory, I think.
I don't know enough to be specific, but it seems like a design deficiency to me. If I had occasion to do anything with mine, I think I would drill out the holes through the transom for a close, unthreaded fit for the bolts so the tang and the backing plate could float a bit to spread the load through the whole piece.
There is nothing preventing you from increasing the width of the piece, to put more beef beyond the bolt holes.I can get a replacement made up locally out of 316L for $300.
Along those same lines, the countersunk holes likely remove a lot more material than is really necessary. Pan-head screws wouldn't likely protrude enough to cause any problems, and they'd allow less drilling in the chainplate.There is nothing preventing you from increasing the width of the piece, to put more beef beyond the bolt holes.