Impact ? more likely somebody used it for towing or as a jacking point !
Tie bars are subjected to various forces, ie tensile, compressive and bending moments, however of very special concern is where people fit super hard tie bar bushes, these are often made of nylon and are only for racing, not for road use.
Under heavy braking or to some extent acceleration the tie bar is under tensile/compressive and bending moments (forces) heavy duty tie bars will reduce the impact that these forces have on the geometry.
An often overlooked mode of failure is the area just at the point of transition from 1/2" diameter to the larger 5/8" diameter of the uprated tie bars, which is by default a fatigue failure area that is not such an issue on the standard lighter duty tie bars, this is why careful design and manufacture is so important, whilst careful consideration of the tie bar bush is also taken into account.
Think of it like this, as your suspension goes up and down over the bumps in the road, the tie has to change angle, if the bushes are too stiff this small section of tie bar will be held rigid and therefore the tie bar will bend up and down at this point, a heavy duty tie bar is more likely to bend at this point being the smallest diameter, whilst also having a stress raiser corner.
Something about the standard tie bars....
They will fail at about 65kN which is about 6600 kg and will almost always fail at the bolt interface to the bottom arm under direct tensile loading.
Edited by MRA, 08 May 2016 - 01:21 AM.