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I had a paid hunter a few years ago bring a spool of mule tape with him to winch a buck out of a fairly deep canyon. I think it had a tensile strength of 5K#. He must have known a lineman or something
I don't think mule tape works very well for a capstan winch though.
3/8 dbl braided poly.https://www.portablewinch.com/products/double-braided-polyester-ropes-o-10-mm?variant=37693158391998We used 100 yards repeatedly for two days and it held up but we chucked it as it was well used. (Pulling elk several miles). 5000# strength. We also used it around a pulley to pull elk with a truck out of a canyon. Under that use I would bump up to 1/2”. 3/8 was plenty for capstan and 100 yRds just got us to an anchor everytime.
Quote from: HntnFsh on January 19, 2025, 10:10:22 AMI don't think mule tape works very well for a capstan winch though.If it was cheap enough, I’d bet a fella could make it work fine. A couple of rubber bands on the pulley would probably provide plenty of bite
Quote from: Luna butte on January 19, 2025, 10:24:27 AMQuote from: HntnFsh on January 19, 2025, 10:10:22 AMI don't think mule tape works very well for a capstan winch though.If it was cheap enough, I’d bet a fella could make it work fine. A couple of rubber bands on the pulley would probably provide plenty of biteI was wondering about that. If nothing else, the mule tape could be an extender and only pull the length of the braided.I'm envisioning a series of connection points in the mule tape within the distance of braided you have. i.e. if you had 200' of braided and 1000' of mule tape, installation connection points every 175'. Or....move the winch point periodically without having to haul the winch to the animal.
What do the power companies use for a winch when pulling wire with mule tape? If friction is needed for pulling then just add a full more turns I would think.