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Author Topic: Towing/Recovery winches,chains,straps,shackles,D-rings  (Read 11637 times)

Offline jeepasaurusrex

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Re: Towing/Recovery chains,straps,shackles,D-rings
« Reply #30 on: July 12, 2010, 01:41:57 PM »
I have a Warn 8274 (8,000lb) on the front of my CJ7. Best winch ever made by Warn. Fastest line speed also. :tup:
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Offline Sportfury

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Re: Towing/Recovery chains,straps,shackles,D-rings
« Reply #31 on: July 13, 2010, 07:23:15 PM »
I use a simpson capstan winch, a couple blocks and a hank of rope. the beauty is the winch goes from a chainsaw to a winch in 2 minutes, weighs 10 pounds and can pull an unlimited distance. the rope seems to be the limiting factor. I use rope that has a 4k wll and add a block to get fancy. I am amazed everytime I use it.

I checked out that capstan winch and it looks pretty awesome http://www.simpsonwinchinc.com/. That is exactly what I needed last year when I got stuck down in the bottom of a canyon while chukar hunting. I want one!

Offline addicted

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Re: Towing/Recovery chains,straps,shackles,D-rings
« Reply #32 on: July 13, 2010, 07:43:36 PM »
my uncle uses something like that for pulling out elk.  :drool:
"Right now, I am thinking that If my grandmother was here, she would be lecturing me about how there are poor people in Africa, that would just love to have a Ruger, I would just say "Great, granny, lets just ship all the Rugers to Africa!"


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Offline addicted

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Re: Towing/Recovery chains,straps,shackles,D-rings
« Reply #33 on: July 13, 2010, 09:49:44 PM »
So what happens when you go past an electric whinches capacity?

Does it simply stop and start burning windings or is there more serious damage?

Lets say, a 2500lb winch and a 3600lb cherokee. i'm not looking to climb trees or anything.
« Last Edit: July 13, 2010, 09:56:35 PM by addicted »
"Right now, I am thinking that If my grandmother was here, she would be lecturing me about how there are poor people in Africa, that would just love to have a Ruger, I would just say "Great, granny, lets just ship all the Rugers to Africa!"


Loving life in the Great Northwest one day at a time.

It sounds like it's time to get a new gun.

Offline ICEMAN

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Re: Towing/Recovery winches,chains,straps,shackles,D-rings
« Reply #34 on: July 14, 2010, 04:15:34 AM »
You can multiply the pulling force of a winch with a block, plus you can often use available traction and pulling force of the vehicle in conjunction with the winch. Your winch may only need to provide a bit of assistance to get you out...
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Offline jeepasaurusrex

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Re: Towing/Recovery winches,chains,straps,shackles,D-rings
« Reply #35 on: July 14, 2010, 05:47:12 AM »
A good rule of thumb for selecting a winch is 1.5 times the weight of the of the vehicle. One thing to consider, if your stuck in the mud, the suction from the mud will not allow you to pull your vehicle out with a sub standard winch. Go with a 8,000lb capacity winch (min.) and get it over with. I've used mine for so many more things than getting unstuck. Game recovery, logging (OK, building a really big camp fire :chuckle: ) stretching fence, etc. There are so many uses.
Howa 1500 in .270 Winchester Shootin handloads.

"Vegetarian is an old Indian word for "Bad Hunter"


"If the women don't find you hansom, they should at least find you handy" -Red Green

Offline high country

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Re: Towing/Recovery winches,chains,straps,shackles,D-rings
« Reply #36 on: July 14, 2010, 08:10:58 AM »
another thing to remember is the electric winches are rated at the single layer, as cable wraps over the next layer....power goes down....as much as 15-20% per layer. with that said you just have to monitor the winch and oce you can't keep your hand on the motor, you need to stop and let it cool. if you are at max load and on a steep hill a worm gear winch will hold you, a planetary, like the re series, or the m and xd series will potentially reverse rotate and let you go backwards. I am pretty sure the 8274 will not allow it to spool out, bu I have never had one that tight.

Offline jeepasaurusrex

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Re: Towing/Recovery winches,chains,straps,shackles,D-rings
« Reply #37 on: July 14, 2010, 08:38:48 AM »
The 8274 has a ratcheting brake on the side that will hold you. The older model had a drum/style brake that required you to hold it with your hand.
Howa 1500 in .270 Winchester Shootin handloads.

"Vegetarian is an old Indian word for "Bad Hunter"


"If the women don't find you hansom, they should at least find you handy" -Red Green

Offline addicted

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Re: Towing/Recovery winches,chains,straps,shackles,D-rings
« Reply #38 on: July 19, 2010, 11:53:42 AM »
For now, I'm going with a BFC(big fu*&ing chain).  I found a tow hook i can attach to the front, but i'll have to take off my cow catcher that the PO put on there.

then a 2.75 inch lift and 31's in the fall  :IBCOOL:
"Right now, I am thinking that If my grandmother was here, she would be lecturing me about how there are poor people in Africa, that would just love to have a Ruger, I would just say "Great, granny, lets just ship all the Rugers to Africa!"


Loving life in the Great Northwest one day at a time.

It sounds like it's time to get a new gun.

Offline high country

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Re: Towing/Recovery winches,chains,straps,shackles,D-rings
« Reply #39 on: July 19, 2010, 12:21:07 PM »
big chains are nice for snatch block set up or for binding a load on a trailer, but they are way hard on parts when you start tugging on them. I have pulled the bumper right off of a blazer once.....dude was bummed.

Offline toyman2

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Re: Towing/Recovery winches,chains,straps,shackles,D-rings
« Reply #40 on: July 23, 2010, 06:06:12 PM »
the energy a chain carrys will damage alot of stuff or kill a person, a strap carrys energy also but it has no weight to carry the energy.
a chain is a bad idea it also creats a shock load that is not good for anything and is carryed through out everything including the frame of the truck.
about any Warn winch is good and trustworthy, there is a reason that a cheap winch is priced cheap

Offline Recurve-Elk

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Re: Towing/Recovery winches,chains,straps,shackles,D-rings
« Reply #41 on: July 29, 2010, 10:53:44 AM »
I use a good strong strap.  I think its rated to 30,000lbs.  Besides that, just drive safely. 

 


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