Demlotcrew wrote:Sorry but thats just complete bolox, nothing needs doing to the arms, BMW motorsport ran extremely high spring rates and never was there a failure, their DTM arms had even less metal and withstood 400nm rear spring and very very highly valved dampers (using stock bolts), Gaz are much softer, I can guarantee the damper will fail before the arm does.
You wont add anything except weight and complexity.

as i said, experience has shown its ok in this application, but that doesn't mean its the best way.
but very clearly its not RIGHT.
A bolt in double shear has significantly better chances of bearing a load vs a bolt in single shear. FACT.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structural ... ing_theory
http://sector111.blogspot.co.uk/2012/01 ... ained.html
unless you have some information that can prove a bolt in single shear is magically better and all engineering theory up to this point is wrong.
as harry said: "i don't know of / have never seen any car designed from the outset to use a single weight bearing strut which would be supported by a single bolt that's not supported at both ends."
You now why that is? because a correctly designed suspension member would be put into double shear where possible.
No designer worth his salt would put a damper in single shear out of choice.
Now unless you want to re write the laws of physics then i suggest you unbunch your panties, wind your neck in and accept the fact that double shear is the correct way to mount a damper/coil over.