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Ground Anchor
Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators
Ground Anchor
I tryed searching but got nothing. Which ground anchor are you using? Which one's work well, which ones dont work so well? Anyone made their own or had it custom made lighter than commercialy available ones? Any clue on what designs work well and what doesnt? Any help would be appreciated. Will be for use in outback comps.
Thanks, Tom
Thanks, Tom
Its not a bundy!
God of Magnificant Ideas!
Re: Ground Anchor
So did I..... took 45secs.....tom_286 wrote:I tryed searching but got nothing.
http://www.outerlimits4x4.com/ftopic789 ... und+anchor
[color=blue][size=150][b]And your cry-baby, whinyassed opinion would be.....? [/b][/size][/color]
Hey Tom. We used Rogers ground grabber in both the cliff hanger and the OBC. We found it to be reasonable successful where others failed in the same terrain.
I have seen a lot of home made jobbies that just simply do not work! If you plan on making one be prepared to spend a lot of time trying it out and remanufacturing it.
Also, different types of terrain behave differently with each different type of anchor. So if you build one and test it, just cos it works at the sand in Portland doesn't mean it will work as well at the outback. That's from experience.
Cheers Dan
I have seen a lot of home made jobbies that just simply do not work! If you plan on making one be prepared to spend a lot of time trying it out and remanufacturing it.
Also, different types of terrain behave differently with each different type of anchor. So if you build one and test it, just cos it works at the sand in Portland doesn't mean it will work as well at the outback. That's from experience.
Cheers Dan
[quote="Uhhohh"]As far as an indecent proposal goes, I'd accept nothing less than $100,000 to tolerate buggery. Any less and it's just not worth the psychological trauma. [/quote]
Agree with what Dan said. Rogers ground grabber is the way to go, seen a few home made jobbies fail, but I haven't seen one of his fail as yet, not worth wasting your time building your own, when you can buy one thats proven. Also seen those folding recovery trees in use at Cliffhanger a few years ago, they were a waste of time in the hard pack stuff.
I know some people with 80 series L/C's that would make good ground anchors. You have to winch them through everything anyway.Yom wrote:I've got a td42 which would act as a bloody good ground anchor.
[quote="Uhhohh"]As far as an indecent proposal goes, I'd accept nothing less than $100,000 to tolerate buggery. Any less and it's just not worth the psychological trauma. [/quote]
Re: Ground Anchor
I must be doing something wrong because my searches never work But thanks for that!V8Patrol wrote:So did I..... took 45secs.....tom_286 wrote:I tryed searching but got nothing.
Its not a bundy!
I haven't used one but I've seen them not hold and have then lent my anchor to them so they could get out.me3@neuralfibre.com wrote:Has anyone tried the PRT - Portable Rescue Tree? Their boat anchors work very well.
Thanx
Paul
I use a custom built one that is a copy of I think the Firma Grip? Whatever brand it is copying is no longer made which is why we are copying it as it was a very good anchor. I've used it in everything from hard clay, to sand and pumice and have had success in everything. It is a folding type but I've welded it solid.
The key to the anchor is the angle and size of the spade. To steep and it won't dig, to shallow and it won't hold. And obviously to small it won't hold and too big you can't get it out.
I'm in the process of building a lighter one but the sizes and ahgles will be the same as what I've got, I'm just using a better design for strength vs wieght.
93 Nissan Pathfinder / Terrano Turboed VH45, GQ Trans and T-case, coil overs, hydraulic winch and fair bit of other stuff. (Currently a pile of parts in the workshop)
http://www.pullpal.com/
Used a pull-pal in 2 Outback Challenges. Worked very well in sand and OK in mud for the weight of Hilux and Jeep Wrangler.
Used a pull-pal in 2 Outback Challenges. Worked very well in sand and OK in mud for the weight of Hilux and Jeep Wrangler.
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