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Looking at coverage of the American comps I have noticed that a lot of the buggies run there winch cable to the front diff. Having discussed this with Ballsac we came to the conclusion it was to restrict front travel when climing to stop the suspension springing the buggy over backwards. Just curious what other readers thought were.

Yea Ive noticed that too. I dont know that it would stop the front sus from throwing the rig go over backwards in a momentum fashion cause the shocks should stop that(I think that having really good shocks is very important in rockcrawling).
The biggest benefit (this has been discussed on pirate) is that it stops the front suspension from unloading on steep climbs. What this means is that when the rig is pointed steep up hill there is a lot less weight on the front springs. Now since there is less weight, the front springs extend (unload) and the front sits much heigher (we would be talking inches here depending on what spring rate you are running. The softer the springs the worse it happens). So essencially the front sits higher raising the COG which flips you over backwards (even when crawling really slow). This is what they are trying to stop with the cable.
Sam
The biggest benefit (this has been discussed on pirate) is that it stops the front suspension from unloading on steep climbs. What this means is that when the rig is pointed steep up hill there is a lot less weight on the front springs. Now since there is less weight, the front springs extend (unload) and the front sits much heigher (we would be talking inches here depending on what spring rate you are running. The softer the springs the worse it happens). So essencially the front sits higher raising the COG which flips you over backwards (even when crawling really slow). This is what they are trying to stop with the cable.
Sam
I have NFI but think Ruff is on the right track but also could be to pull the axle forward a little to conteract the wheel be pushed back from the rock this should help with traction
Thinking along the same lines as the shackle in front or rear of front springs argument
The above could just be a brain fart but thinking out aloud and throwing the idea in for discussion
Thinking along the same lines as the shackle in front or rear of front springs argument
The above could just be a brain fart but thinking out aloud and throwing the idea in for discussion
another point is that by pulling down on the cable it is effectively lowering the angle the truck is sitting on and getting more weight on the front tyres which increases traction to the front tyres.
Probably not a great deal but at those angles every bit counts and the winch can be used to change the angle.
Probably not a great deal but at those angles every bit counts and the winch can be used to change the angle.
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AussieCJ7 wrote:I have NFI but think Ruff is on the right track but also could be to pull the axle forward a little to conteract the wheel be pushed back from the rock this should help with traction
Thinking along the same lines as the shackle in front or rear of front springs argument
The above could just be a brain fart but thinking out aloud and throwing the idea in for discussion
Hu what did i say that sounded right

RUFF wrote:AussieCJ7 wrote:I have NFI but think Ruff is on the right track but also could be to pull the axle forward a little to conteract the wheel be pushed back from the rock this should help with traction
Thinking along the same lines as the shackle in front or rear of front springs argument
The above could just be a brain fart but thinking out aloud and throwing the idea in for discussion
Hu what did i say that sounded right
"NOTHING" that makes it right
to be honest i mixed you and strange rover up
Actually I was thinking the same sort of thing, If I lower the pressure on the front bags and increase it it the rear , so the rig [body weight] is heavier on the front, the chassis actually sits flat, angled into the hill face, reducing the chances of cartwheeling backwards. 
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I think you just might be on to something Marcus. Get some pictures or video when you try this out. Should be interesting to watch.Bentzook wrote:Actually I was thinking the same sort of thing, If I lower the pressure on the front bags and increase it it the rear , so the rig [body weight] is heavier on the front, the chassis actually sits flat, angled into the hill face, reducing the chances of cartwheeling backwards.
throw all ur link geometry offBentzook wrote:Actually I was thinking the same sort of thing, If I lower the pressure on the front bags and increase it it the rear , so the rig [body weight] is heavier on the front, the chassis actually sits flat, angled into the hill face, reducing the chances of cartwheeling backwards.
should be good watching it try to bounce its way up a hill
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