I think that posts like this are technically flawed because they don't supply us with sufficient information to be able to properly judge what has happened. In the many years that I spent working in top bike shops, I did get the chance to see more than a few broken stems. I must however state that I never saw a stem "break" like that shown in the original post APART FROM WHERE THE USER HAD DISREGARDED STANDARD PRACTICE, COMMON SENSE AND MANUFACTURER'S INDICATIONS. By this, I mean that every single one that I ever saw with this type of failure had shown some type of user error. This is not to say that this is the case with this particular case, but this is my own personal experience. In one case the error was using a French diameter stem (22 mm) in an English diameter fork (22,2 mm). In another case, the steer tube had been reamed out to remove surface oxidation increasing the inner diameter just enough to make for poor compatibility between the stem and the steer tube. All the remaining cases involved stems that had been inserted into the frame less than was indicated on the stem, allowing for extra leverage. The far more common breakage was at the handlebar clamping end. Most of these breakages occurred due to poor forgings, over-tightening or manufacturer-induced stress risers (some manufacturers used striations on the bar side surface of the stem.