With each mod I have done, I have found a new 'weakest point' in my vehicle. Currently it is the half shafts, and I'm looking at a solution to make it stronger, not buying a weaker part that will break before they do. It just does not make good off-roading sence to me.
Who has tried these? Why did you decide to add a weak point instead of building stronger? Are you satisfyed with your purchase?
Zig
I run them in the Warn hubs on my GV. Warn calls them "Hub Fuses". I bought and installed them because: A) The GV had no hublocks to begin with, B) I wanted to be the first GV on the block with them, and C) I wanted to build a truck that can take my family way into the backcountry of Moab and not have a major part fail.
Here's the deal. The basic design of the fuse is for a Dana axle running 5-297X U-joints. The standard clutch ring in a Warn Premium hublock is made to withstand over 80,000 inch-pounds of torque. The 297X will break around 55,000 inch-lbs in a strait line, and less if the wheels are turns at an angle. The hub fuse is designed to sheer around 46,000 inch-lbs.
Here's what Warn says off it's package: "Here's how it works: When the Hub Fuse fails, the teeth strip. Just pull the cap, replace the used Hub Fuse, then replace the cap and get back into competition."
There main angle for a competition is that it's much better to blow a couple "5-min to change" Fuses than bust a U-joint and time out while replacing it.
Good news, if you are open diffed, spooled or "selectable locked", these work great. Bad news, if you run an automatic locker, damage can occur inside the carrier if a fuse fails (so said 1 ragizine article)
Fact is, anything can break. I first hand witnessed a 1.6L powered Sammy break a BIG knuckle U-joint and yoke off a D60! Nothing, and I mean this, nothing is unbreakable on a 4x4. ( I also watched a 1.3 Sammy twist a custom Woody shaft right off, but that's another story)
Now, back to us. Where does a Kick/GV CV break? I dunno, but I bet it's not as strong as a 297X. But, if the fuse fails, and in doing so, protects my axle and allows me to be to be back on the trail in 5 mins, I like it.
Right now, there is no "off-the-shelf" solution to beefier CV shafts. The most we can to is protect them. Will the Fuses hurt? No. Will they help? Can't hurt. It would be great to find the bust point on the Kick CV in inch-lbs, and then have the fuses modified to the proper strength. That would be great.
What would be best is an aftermarket CV that will match the strength of the 297X u-joints and bolt up to the Anvil housing. Then the fuses would be perfect. I mean, custom shafts will cost us at least 2 Franklins each. I'd much rather blow a $10 fuse just before one of my $200 shafts was to detonate.

Also, food for thought. Now that the 22-spline shafts have been "fixed" with 26-spline (I've seen then break too), we've put steel axle componets in, and add bigger CVs, the weak link has to move somewhere, as it never disappears. What's next? I suspect the R&P, I mean, they are only 7" anyway. And since nothing can be made unbreakable/unbendable, a well planned out, low replacement cost, easily repairable "fuse" is a wise idea, IMHO.
Well, that my 2 cents.