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Using your front low mount winch as a diff winch....?
Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators
Using your front low mount winch as a diff winch....?
Gday guys,
I want to work out a way to rig up the Warn Low mount on my gq SWB to be used to tuck the front down on hill climbs if needed
Currently its in a standard GQ position in a Cheesy front bar. Now i can obviously just wrap it down on the the diff from the front but im hesitant to do this due to the winch being so far forward of the diff and possible pulling my front diff towards the front of the car rather then just down......
Has anyone tried to do this? ive thought about running the cable out the back of the winch rather then the front, under the radiator and using some kind of tube slide bar under the motor to change the force direction to up and down....
I can put a small diff winch under the bonnet somewhere i think but id like to use my existing winch if possible....
ideas or pics of ppl who have done this?
cheers
Screwy
I want to work out a way to rig up the Warn Low mount on my gq SWB to be used to tuck the front down on hill climbs if needed
Currently its in a standard GQ position in a Cheesy front bar. Now i can obviously just wrap it down on the the diff from the front but im hesitant to do this due to the winch being so far forward of the diff and possible pulling my front diff towards the front of the car rather then just down......
Has anyone tried to do this? ive thought about running the cable out the back of the winch rather then the front, under the radiator and using some kind of tube slide bar under the motor to change the force direction to up and down....
I can put a small diff winch under the bonnet somewhere i think but id like to use my existing winch if possible....
ideas or pics of ppl who have done this?
cheers
Screwy
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Im aware i dont NEED a winch on the front on a well setup comp rig. On my lifted daily SWB BOAT, i need some insurance on a steep hill climb / rock step, and even if i dont use it, being able to keep the weight of the motor lower to the ground on a couple of the very big steps may prove beneficial
screwy
screwy
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The part I never understood was that when you winch down the front you loose ground clearance. So why not just run lower springs full time?
Perhaps a better alternative would be to raise the rear when going up hills, or the front when going down.
Perhaps a better alternative would be to raise the rear when going up hills, or the front when going down.
The worst part about being told you have Alzheimer's, is that it doesn't just happen once.
Just a thought and I might be completely wrong, but just say your going up hill with the winch pulling the front down and you end up in a situation where you are close to rolling, unloading the front diff to use the winch to recover yourself may end up causing a roll (diff drops/body raises, centre on gravity changes/rises)
Wouldn't it be easier to use use a small secondary winch and have the ability to raise or lower the front end, and use your main winch at the same time?
Wouldn't it be easier to use use a small secondary winch and have the ability to raise or lower the front end, and use your main winch at the same time?
How do you loose ground clearance ? are you making the tyres smaller ?oldmate wrote:The part I never understood was that when you winch down the front you loose ground clearance. So why not just run lower springs full time?
Perhaps a better alternative would be to raise the rear when going up hills, or the front when going down.
You may loose aproach angle or breakover angle .. but not not clearance under the lowest part of the vehicle.
" 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 "
I missed that you started this thread Screwy. I was wrong you need a winch. PUSSYScrewy wrote:Im aware i dont NEED a winch on the front on a well setup comp rig. On my lifted daily SWB BOAT, i need some insurance on a steep hill climb / rock step, and even if i dont use it, being able to keep the weight of the motor lower to the ground on a couple of the very big steps may prove beneficial
screwy
Cheers for that HATERRUFF wrote:I missed that you started this thread Screwy. I was wrong you need a winch. PUSSYScrewy wrote:Im aware i dont NEED a winch on the front on a well setup comp rig. On my lifted daily SWB BOAT, i need some insurance on a steep hill climb / rock step, and even if i dont use it, being able to keep the weight of the motor lower to the ground on a couple of the very big steps may prove beneficial
screwy
TUFF TRUCK TEAM OPPOSITE LOCK Proudly Sponsored By:
Opposite Lock Narellan, Lightforce Australia, Offroad Systems, Judd Panels, Townsend Signs, RDG Engineering, Central Safety Workwear
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that's all good and well but will he be wearing teal slacks whilst doing the job??????????RUFF wrote:You want to charge him $100 for 3 foot of tube and 10min welding? Thats shitloads to much. I know a bloke that can do it for half that.hi_luxmad wrote:if your in newcastle i can do it for about $100
the old teal slacks gag is still going lol.
I saw a truck at TT10 that had an eyelet & shackle on the front housing, then the winch cable is hooked on the front bar, cable comes though the fairlead as usual and the first loop goes down to the front diff. easy to unhook when not required.
I saw a truck at TT10 that had an eyelet & shackle on the front housing, then the winch cable is hooked on the front bar, cable comes though the fairlead as usual and the first loop goes down to the front diff. easy to unhook when not required.
'91 Toyota Surf SSR Ltd. 2.4 TD Auto, Coil SAS, Duals, 4.88, Longs w/ front ARB, 35" MTRs
'97 Toyota Surf SSR-G Intercooled 3.0 TD Auto. 2" lift, Xrox bar, Waeco, Drawers, 32" BFGs
'97 Toyota Surf SSR-G Intercooled 3.0 TD Auto. 2" lift, Xrox bar, Waeco, Drawers, 32" BFGs
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