Notice: We request that you don't just set up a new account at this time if you are a previous user.
If you used to be one of our moderators, please feel free to reach out to Chris via the facebook Outerlimits4x4 group and he will get you set back up with access should he need you.
Recovery:If you cannot access your old email address and don't remember your password, please click here to log a change of email address so you can do a password reset.

My Bodgy Winch Install - testing on Page 2

General Tech Talk

Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators

Posts: 845
Joined: Sun Dec 17, 2006 8:28 pm
Location: Bairnsdale, East Gippsland

Post by jet-6 »

Ive seen some rough unsafe jobs, but that is right up there!!!!!
Posts: 3224
Joined: Mon Jan 12, 2004 6:03 pm
Location: Moggill

Post by phippsy »

I liked the thread title the best "Bodgy Winch Install" at least he didn't lie...
User avatar
Guy
Posts: 10366
Joined: Thu Dec 12, 2002 8:43 am
Location: Wangaratta

Post by Guy »

chimpboy wrote:Here is someone else's diagram:

Image

That is how I've always understood it to work. The equal/opposite reaction concern you had is covered there as you can see.
oops ..In my head I didnt have the other end of the rope\winch attatched to the vehicle .. :oops:
" If governments are involved in the covering up the knowledge of aliens, Then they are doing a much better job of it than they do of everything else "
Posts: 4583
Joined: Fri Jun 11, 2004 5:57 pm
Location: Wheeling in my backyard

Post by sierrajim »

I wonder if all of these opinions are going to be condensed and written up as someone elses thoughts :?:
[quote="Harb"]Well I'm guessing that they didn't think everyone would carry on like a big bunch of sooky girls over it like they have........[/quote]
Posts: 1245
Joined: Fri May 02, 2003 4:28 pm
Location: Kyrgyzstan

Post by me3@neuralfibre.com »

bru21 wrote:now that the template is made, a steel one should happen quickly
After it fails it'll become steel.
Like I said - tested the mount - hasn't broken yet, not even close.

I DO DOUBT the fairlead attachment, BUT, the failure modes for the fairlead mounting failing are not significant for me.
Further - as stated - for the fairlead to fail it would need to be a sideways pull. My bullbar mounts (fatory toyota) have VERY THIN sideways stiffeners, they would fail first.
Worst case the rivets will just pull through on one side, big deal.

FYI - aluminium is 2/3 the strength of steel, but 1/3 the weight. Therefore is has to be 50% thicker than steel to bear the same load, and it will weight 1/2 as much.

Paul
Lexus LX470 - hrrm Winter Tyres
Gone - Cruiser HZJ105 Turbo'd Locked & Lifted
Gone - 3L Surf
Posts: 214
Joined: Tue May 30, 2006 6:37 pm
Location: Gembrook,Vic

Post by Evil 73 »

sierrajim wrote:I wonder if all of these opinions are going to be condensed and written up as someone elses thoughts :?:
:rofl: :rofl: :rofl:

Ben
BIGGER THE PROBLEM, BIGGER THE HAMMER.
YOTABITS RACE TEAM PROUDLY SPONSORED BY BUILDERSEDGE P/L, COCKATOO CANVAS, AMERICAN VEHICLE SALES, YOTABITS.COM
Posts: 2072
Joined: Sun Feb 11, 2007 4:50 pm
Location: Hobart

Post by macca81 »

me3@neuralfibre.com wrote: FYI - aluminium is 2/3 the strength of steel, but 1/3 the weight. Therefore is has to be 50% thicker than steel to bear the same load, and it will weight 1/2 as much.

Paul
nope, it has to be 33% thicker to bear the same load, and as a result will be 66% of the weight
[quote="Barnsey"]
Bronwyn Bishop does it for me.[/quote]
Posts: 1245
Joined: Fri May 02, 2003 4:28 pm
Location: Kyrgyzstan

Post by me3@neuralfibre.com »

Evil 73 wrote:
me3@neuralfibre.com wrote:I tried to make it fail.

Mount showed no permanent deformation

Care to guess at the strength of the feet on the winch (they are alloy)

But yes, it's an experiment.

Paul
Theses are generally in compression, they are not being pulled against in pretty much all the mounting ive seen over the years, they would defianteley snap if pulled in the other direction. As far as i see it have a look at the way the manufactures ARB,TJM etc mount the winches to the bars they are all in compression which then only leaves the bar itself to fail.

Ben
I thought the mount direction was commonly differnet for US vs Aus. They mount theirs flat, we mount the feet forward.

How is a hi-mount mounted?

Paul
Lexus LX470 - hrrm Winter Tyres
Gone - Cruiser HZJ105 Turbo'd Locked & Lifted
Gone - 3L Surf
Posts: 19062
Joined: Sat Oct 25, 2003 11:39 pm
Location: In a horse near you

Post by chimpboy »

If we're comparing aluminium to steel, it's probably worth noting that aluminium's fatigue performance is less than 50% that of steel.

http://www.ussautomotive.com/auto/steel ... cfacts.htm

Obviously this is a pro-steel site so make of it what you will.
This is not legal advice.
Posts: 214
Joined: Tue May 30, 2006 6:37 pm
Location: Gembrook,Vic

Post by Evil 73 »

chimpboy wrote:If we're comparing aluminium to steel, it's probably worth noting that aluminium's fatigue performance is less than 50% that of steel.

http://www.ussautomotive.com/auto/steel ... cfacts.htm

Obviously this is a pro-steel site so make of it what you will.
Alloy bars are for trucks

http://tbn0.google.com/images?q=tbn:F9r ... inyone.com.

Or maybe you should get yourself one of these, i think it might suit your purpose.

http://www.beaututes.com/gallery/waterm ... 883&size=1
BIGGER THE PROBLEM, BIGGER THE HAMMER.
YOTABITS RACE TEAM PROUDLY SPONSORED BY BUILDERSEDGE P/L, COCKATOO CANVAS, AMERICAN VEHICLE SALES, YOTABITS.COM
Posts: 3385
Joined: Fri Sep 17, 2004 8:26 pm
Location: Melbourne

Post by shakes »

me3@neuralfibre.com wrote:
bru21 wrote:now that the template is made, a steel one should happen quickly
After it fails it'll become steel.
Like I said - tested the mount - hasn't broken yet, not even close.

Paul
AFTER! Man, after this thread and the "my diff was making noise but I thought it was normal" thread, your on the verge of driving through gravity.

alluminium doesnt fail like steel which will stretch and creak and groan and carry on and generally give a fair warning, it will fatigue and will fail in a major way with very minimal warning signs. I really hope it's only your car and ego that get hurt.

All for a weight saving of 30-40kg's max and $200 of fuel over 39,835km's?
Posts: 1109
Joined: Mon Feb 12, 2007 8:48 pm
Location: Australia

Post by hulsty »

I think you need to improve your basic design abit mate, it could be made to work with aluminium, would be very chunky with minimal weight saving over steel but it could be done.

One thing, i've circled in the picture where it will fail, those corners, even though slightly rounded are a GREAT spot for a stress riser to form from fatigue and begin cracking. As has been pointed out cyclic loads arent going to go the aluminium any favours.

The way the winch will twist in operation will push down on the bottom face of the PFC where i've circled, and the only bit of strength it had to resist this is now gone, all the strength to resist this moment was in the flange. For a start if you insist on cutting out the flange some stiffening ribs must be placed along the bottom to build up the lost strength.

Image
Posts: 1109
Joined: Mon Feb 12, 2007 8:48 pm
Location: Australia

Post by hulsty »

Just another thing, if you used a high strength hardened alumnium this will make your fatigue and cracking issues worse as it is not as tough, more brittle. I had a hardened aluminum accelerator cable mount fatigue and crack like this, it was 4mm thick and only had to fight against some light springs on the throttle body.
Posts: 19062
Joined: Sat Oct 25, 2003 11:39 pm
Location: In a horse near you

Post by chimpboy »

Thing is, regardless of exact calculations you just can't look at that mount and not know in your gut that it isn't going to work. To me this is just from having seen a lot of different machines work and survive or work and break, over the years. As I said the rivets don't worry me as much as the "cradle", it just doesn't look like it can handle its likely future.
This is not legal advice.
Posts: 1245
Joined: Fri May 02, 2003 4:28 pm
Location: Kyrgyzstan

Post by me3@neuralfibre.com »

http://neuralfibre.com/paul/4wd/winch-m ... aking-rope

Let the games continue.

Anyone in BNE care to suggest any other reasonable test - I'll see what I can do.

Paul
Lexus LX470 - hrrm Winter Tyres
Gone - Cruiser HZJ105 Turbo'd Locked & Lifted
Gone - 3L Surf
Posts: 5462
Joined: Fri Dec 20, 2002 1:29 pm
Location: Boomba

Post by WICKED »

me3@neuralfibre.com wrote:http://neuralfibre.com/paul/4wd/winch-m ... aking-rope

Let the games continue.

Anyone in BNE care to suggest any other reasonable test - I'll see what I can do.

Paul
Try a match!
Buds Customs : Street, Track & Trail - Parts & Fabrication - Nissan, Toyota, Custom D60 gear
http://www.facebook.com/budscustoms
Posts: 4583
Joined: Fri Jun 11, 2004 5:57 pm
Location: Wheeling in my backyard

Post by sierrajim »

me3@neuralfibre.com wrote:http://neuralfibre.com/paul/4wd/winch-m ... aking-rope

Let the games continue.

Anyone in BNE care to suggest any other reasonable test - I'll see what I can do.

Paul
Didn't Mr Dynamica hang his car from a crane? :D
[quote="Harb"]Well I'm guessing that they didn't think everyone would carry on like a big bunch of sooky girls over it like they have........[/quote]
Posts: 145
Joined: Wed Jun 29, 2005 5:52 pm
Location: Newcastle

Post by smithie »

sierrajim wrote:Didn't Mr Dynamica hang his car from a crane? :D
DO IT!! - just stand well clear!
Posts: 782
Joined: Tue Mar 08, 2005 12:03 pm
Location: brisbane

Post by giantracing »

yeah great ............. its all fun until someone get hurts.
build em tuff, drive em ruff.........

Custom 4wd Creations Brisbane
0438279890
Posts: 693
Joined: Sun Sep 26, 2004 2:37 pm
Location: Rochedale South - Brisbane

Post by benhl »

me3@neuralfibre.com wrote: It if breaks, it breaks :)
If you're winching you're already in a world of sh1t - what you you think is going to happen when it goes BANG!
GU 4.2 TD Garrett BB Hi-flow, M8274 + Bells & Whistles with plenty of fruit still on the list!
[b][color=red]\ m / ( > . < ) \ m /[/color][/b]
Posts: 7345
Joined: Wed Jun 02, 2004 3:29 pm
Location: Melbourne

Post by Gwagensteve »

I don't think it will go bang, I think it will fall apart over time. I'm not aware of an alloy bar maker than hangs a winch off the bar - they all use some kind of steel cradle, and I vote it's due to the fatigue properties of aluminium.

I'd say if you can see visible flexing of the cradle under high load, it's not going to last.

Giving it a few hard pulls is going to be NOTHING like the fatigue caused by 2 years of normal driving.

Steve.
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]
Posts: 2492
Joined: Sun Nov 24, 2002 8:57 pm
Location: Melbourne

Post by bazzle »

It twisted but went back to shape..

Be aware that when it twists drum on winch goes out of alignment and could damage drive mech and braces, resulting in winch failure (just when danger is ats its max.

Make a mount from steel same size min.

Bazzle
Posts: 1245
Joined: Fri May 02, 2003 4:28 pm
Location: Kyrgyzstan

Post by me3@neuralfibre.com »

Gwagensteve wrote:I don't think it will go bang, I think it will fall apart over time. I'm not aware of an alloy bar maker than hangs a winch off the bar - they all use some kind of steel cradle, and I vote it's due to the fatigue properties of aluminium.

I'd say if you can see visible flexing of the cradle under high load, it's not going to last.

Giving it a few hard pulls is going to be NOTHING like the fatigue caused by 2 years of normal driving.

Steve.
Hmm, - that's interesting.

Load from winching - lets say 4000kg @ 50 repetitions for it's life (prob not that many). 4000 kg produces stress, but no strain (permanent) deformation.

Winch + Rope + Cradle weighs say 25KG. Assume 3G acceleration worst case in any direction = 75KG

75KG at say 100,000 cycles. vs 4000KG @ 50 cycles.
I reckon it'll not bother it.

Chassis twisting is normal offroad, but not onroad. That will twist it up a bit.

There is no harmonic / spring vibration in the system. It is mounted at both ends, so shaking is unliekly to be an issue.

We'll have to see, but I would be that "driving" stress won't be significant.

FYI: It's done 12,000km, 4 offroad trips and 4 real recoveries so far, none particularly hard (rocks / hills as opposed to bogged to the chassis).

Re. the twisting - everything flexes, that's normal. Ever looked at a chassis under load? Or a bullbar when winching (watch the panel gaps)?

Paul
Lexus LX470 - hrrm Winter Tyres
Gone - Cruiser HZJ105 Turbo'd Locked & Lifted
Gone - 3L Surf
Posts: 7345
Joined: Wed Jun 02, 2004 3:29 pm
Location: Melbourne

Post by Gwagensteve »

No, I'm sorry, I think you're misunderstanding the different properties of steel Vs aluminium.

There's a very small window between elastic and plastic deformation in aluminium compared to steel.

Additionally, a high number of cycles at low load can propogate fatigue in aluminium. That's just he nature of aluminium. It would be interesting to FEA your mount- those sharp corners on the cutouts are massive, massive stress raisers. Iwouldn't design a mount like that in steel, let alone in a high strength aluminium alloy.

steve.
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]
User avatar
Guy
Posts: 10366
Joined: Thu Dec 12, 2002 8:43 am
Location: Wangaratta

Post by Guy »

I would have thought that you woudl be better off making a mount for the winch off the chassis.. you could sit it further back and only have the fairlead on the bullbar. what does an standard winch mount weigh ? or if you wanted to go really light want does a PTO weigh compared to an electric ?
" If governments are involved in the covering up the knowledge of aliens, Then they are doing a much better job of it than they do of everything else "
Posts: 214
Joined: Tue May 30, 2006 6:37 pm
Location: Gembrook,Vic

Post by Evil 73 »

Me3,

Are you responsable for this too??????

Image

Maybe have a little read of this before the next attempt..........

Image
BIGGER THE PROBLEM, BIGGER THE HAMMER.
YOTABITS RACE TEAM PROUDLY SPONSORED BY BUILDERSEDGE P/L, COCKATOO CANVAS, AMERICAN VEHICLE SALES, YOTABITS.COM
Posts: 1245
Joined: Fri May 02, 2003 4:28 pm
Location: Kyrgyzstan

Post by me3@neuralfibre.com »

love_mud wrote:I would have thought that you woudl be better off making a mount for the winch off the chassis.. you could sit it further back and only have the fairlead on the bullbar. what does an standard winch mount weigh ? or if you wanted to go really light want does a PTO weigh compared to an electric ?
It is directly on the chassis w/ the fairlead on the bullbar.

Paul
Lexus LX470 - hrrm Winter Tyres
Gone - Cruiser HZJ105 Turbo'd Locked & Lifted
Gone - 3L Surf
Posts: 1109
Joined: Mon Feb 12, 2007 8:48 pm
Location: Australia

Post by hulsty »

whats the breaking force of the rope your using ?
Posts: 1245
Joined: Fri May 02, 2003 4:28 pm
Location: Kyrgyzstan

Post by me3@neuralfibre.com »

hulsty wrote:whats the breaking force of the rope your using ?
13,700lb - links to manufacturers and assemblers are in articles.

Paul
Lexus LX470 - hrrm Winter Tyres
Gone - Cruiser HZJ105 Turbo'd Locked & Lifted
Gone - 3L Surf
Posts: 1109
Joined: Mon Feb 12, 2007 8:48 pm
Location: Australia

Post by hulsty »

No wonder it broke then!! According to whats set out in the Australian standards for fibre ropes used in arduous conditions the SWL for your rope is only 690kg!!
Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests