Hahahahahahaha.... Your always good far a laugh Jet.
Talking about bent dual cabs and airbags is always going to bring out the stories of someone's friends, uncles, mother in laws bent ute...
I've just spent the last few hours helping my neighbour strip his accessories off his "about to be written off" bent BT50
that does not have airbagsCAVAET- I do not possess technical knowledge on the subject, but as this is a discussion forum, here is my opinion
I think the advantage that airbags offer, and their true design purpose, is they give you flexibility in your rear spring settings. Generally you would replace your leaf spring pack with one that is rated to the load you intend carrying most of the time. That's fine if you carry a constant load all of the time. but if you use your car as a daily runabout, and load it up for the odd trip away, you are stuck with a leaf pack that is either too harsh when empty, or too soft when loaded. Both of those scenarios are less than ideal for handling.
This is where I think air bags offer the versatility of being able to have a spring that is suited to your vehicles normal use, but gives you the ability to add a bit of air to supplement / assist the springs when carrying more load. And I'd like to stress "supplement / assist", they do not magically increase your GVM.
I agree that on a leaf sprung vehicle, where they are fitted seems to be in contrast with how the spring is mounted, but I do not have the knowledge or expertise needed to fully understand the load forces.
My assumption would be that people that are bending utes are suffering from a combination of problems like vehicle overload, airbags pumped too hard, and external factors applying additional or extreme forces to the rear suspension (cresting sand dunes at speed, severe corrugations, or sharp dips at speed).
All the examples that I've seen appear on the interweb seem to have come from areas where these types of conditions are prevalent IE;- Birdsville (utes broken on the Simpson sand dunes}, Cairns / Weipa (utes broken on the Capes corrugations}, and around areas like Frazer (utes broken after hitting washouts). These are all areas where people would generally have a loaded up duel cab towing their camper / van?
I had airbags in my duel cab Navara for about 5 years with no problems encountered after numerous trips (although I was mindful of the perceived issue and careful about how I loaded), and I have airbags in my current Cruiser wagon. In both instances they have improved the handling of the vehicle whilst towing.
I'll refer back to my "bullbar" comment in my previous post, and qualify that comment. Airbags are like any accessory that we fit to our vehicle. They have design limits and guidelines for proper use. If we use them in ways that are beyond they're design parameters, or expose them to extreme forces, then I'd expect something will break.
Donning flame suit and ducking for cover now....................