lo stranger; im very interested in the broken trunnion pin as i am in the business of cryo-treating . ill just bet that the metallurgical fault you found, in the broken ends of the pin, was a small, roundish nubbin that abutted the surface just at the break. if so, what it was is an austenitic inclusion, in the post heat treat martensitic grain structure of the pin. had the part been cryo-treated [frozen] , the stress riser induced by this inclusion, would not have existed, it would have been incorporated into the martensitic grain structure of the pin, and it [in all probability] would not have broken, because the weak spot didnt exist any longer, it had been induced, by the cryogenic temperatures, to complete the transition that heat treating tried to induce on the part and was only 85-90% successful. cryo-treating brings this success % up to 99+ . that broken trunnion pin is a perfect example of the type of metallurgical defects that cryo-treating eliminates. it, of course, does nothing for mechanical defects, foreign objects, folds in the metal and pre existing cracks, only austenitic inclusions and their accompanying stress risers are affected... JEFF tucson az.