If the begining of the chain is the crankshaft, and the end of the chain is the tire on the pavement (or a rock), the half-shafts are the first to go? I don't think the springs are absorbing much of the drivetrain torque. I have a feeling the weakest link in my build is going to be the transmission. I'll assume off-roaders are popping halfshafts in 4-low? The transmission doesn't actually see the multiplication in torque that the low reduction makes. The trans only sees what's comming off the crankshaft and if I double the engine torque, it's stll less then the low reduction adds to the drivetrain. Say I leave the transmission out of the equation (Stick it in 4th 1:1). With 200ft-lbs at the crank through a 3:1 low gear I have 600lbs at the driveshafts. If I boost that engine to 400ft-lbs, and don't use 4-low, I'm only putting 400ft-lbs to the driveshafts. I'm fairly convinced the drivetrain can handle the power of a v6 turbo but like I said, the transmission worrys me.
I'm impressed by what some people are getting out of these Duratec V6s. I'm trying to find an AWD (center diff) drivetrain that'll bolt to it.
Can anyone think of another longitudinal mounted V6 AWD -something- available with a manual transmission? It MUST contain a center differential. The only thing I've found so far is the '06-08 Grand Vitara and I think there's a Toyota truck out there with a center diff. Toyota 4-runner I believe. If I go the Toyota route, next thing you know I'll have an LS400 1uzfe v8 crammed in here. lol