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Rear winch - above diff
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Rear winch - above diff
Picked up a 2000pound (900kg??) winch and thinkin of setting it up over the rear diff to winch it up.
Will 2000 pound be enough for a full size 4B? It will be a ute by the time i do it
Cheers
Will 2000 pound be enough for a full size 4B? It will be a ute by the time i do it
Cheers
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Xcab Lux on 37 Treps
Xcab Lux on 37 Treps
Pretty sure its for steep down hills. As the rear gets extremly light and with the susp unloading it could push the car/bug over on its nose. Where as if it was pulled down via a winch. The susp would act slike normal, almost.bogged wrote:is this just for transporting?? Tryin to figure out why ya'all's doin itjeep97tj wrote:my 900kg winch wouldnt pull my air shocked zuk down to the bumpstops. This time i will be using to pulleys to get some more pulling power.
Its the same thing as the rockcrawlers using it on the front of there buggys.
In a diesel swb gq. It could be usfull as the front is bloody heavy and the back is bloody light.
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY....
x2turps wrote:Pretty sure its for steep down hills. As the rear gets extremly light and with the susp unloading it could push the car/bug over on its nose. Where as if it was pulled down via a winch. The susp would act slike normal, almost.bogged wrote:is this just for transporting?? Tryin to figure out why ya'all's doin itjeep97tj wrote:my 900kg winch wouldnt pull my air shocked zuk down to the bumpstops. This time i will be using to pulleys to get some more pulling power.
Its the same thing as the rockcrawlers using it on the front of there buggys.
In a diesel swb gq. It could be usfull as the front is bloody heavy and the back is bloody light.
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Xcab Lux on 37 Treps
Xcab Lux on 37 Treps
Re: Rear winch - above diff
It'll be fine. Just mount a small pulley to the axle housing and run it as a double line pull. Instant in-cab adjustable limiting strap.justinshere wrote:Picked up a 2000pound (900kg??) winch and thinkin of setting it up over the rear diff to winch it up.
Will 2000 pound be enough for a full size 4B? It will be a ute by the time i do it
Cheers
Re: Rear winch - above diff
Thanks.Wendle wrote:It'll be fine. Just mount a small pulley to the axle housing and run it as a double line pull. Instant in-cab adjustable limiting strap.justinshere wrote:Picked up a 2000pound (900kg??) winch and thinkin of setting it up over the rear diff to winch it up.
Will 2000 pound be enough for a full size 4B? It will be a ute by the time i do it
Cheers
Thats was i was thinking of doing, having the cable run through a pulley and back up to the chassis.
Justin
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Xcab Lux on 37 Treps
Xcab Lux on 37 Treps
Its not for for recovering the car. As we all know 900kg aint even good enough for a quad bike let alone anything else.bazzle wrote:900kg versus 9000kg.
If you really need to use the winch it isnt going to work safely. May as well put 900kg on the front too and save some money and weight..
Bazzle
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY....
Thanks dude.turps wrote:Pretty sure its for steep down hills. As the rear gets extremly light and with the susp unloading it could push the car/bug over on its nose. Where as if it was pulled down via a winch. The susp would act slike normal, almost.bogged wrote:is this just for transporting?? Tryin to figure out why ya'all's doin itjeep97tj wrote:my 900kg winch wouldnt pull my air shocked zuk down to the bumpstops. This time i will be using to pulleys to get some more pulling power.
Its the same thing as the rockcrawlers using it on the front of there buggys.
In a diesel swb gq. It could be usfull as the front is bloody heavy and the back is bloody light.
So if i pull it in to a certain point and stop it there it wont hold, it'll release to a point wheres theres no tension on the cable?CWBYUP wrote:from my limited knowledge the whinch wont hold where you stop it once you stop pulling the line.
so basically the suspension will pull the line back out.
am i right nam ? or should i go and have another rum ?
Nick
I might have to hook it up n test it.
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Xcab Lux on 37 Treps
Xcab Lux on 37 Treps
The car will just unload back to ride height or a bit higher depending on the load on the rear springs.chimpboy wrote:Imagine that thing unwinds when you are relying on it.
Having the winches to load up the suspension is a very useful tool, but it isn't really used in the way you seem to be thinking. It is more to change the vehicle dynamics and the way the suspension (and therefore the car) behaves in a particular situation.
Say you are driving across a sidehill and you want to put the high side front tyre over a boulder that is maybe twice the height of the tyre, now imagine the sidehill is steep enough that as that front tyre climbs that rock and the rear suspension unloads on the high side it shifts enough weight to the low side to make the car want to fall over.
Same situation, but with a bit of tension on the rear cable and the unsprung weight is now working on your side to anchor the car. But more importantly, the rear suspension is now pre-loaded to the point where the front end will take up the movement needed to pull the front tyre over the rock instead, as it is free to move around while the rear is very restricted.
There is myriad different situations and uses that could be described, but when it comes down to it, all you are using the cables for is to change the way the car behaves in X situation. I don't use mine that much (maybe half a dozen times over a weekend of driving) but those uses will more than likely stop me needing to reverse up or dig across onto a tamer line, or maybe stop the car falling over due to driver error or the car not behaving the way I feel it should in a certain situation. Cable onto the front axle can be a big help on the bigger, faster vertical climbs too.
In-cab adjustable, disconnectable swaybars might be one way of thinking about it?
Thanks Wendle.Wendle wrote:The car will just unload back to ride height or a bit higher depending on the load on the rear springs.chimpboy wrote:Imagine that thing unwinds when you are relying on it.
Having the winches to load up the suspension is a very useful tool, but it isn't really used in the way you seem to be thinking. It is more to change the vehicle dynamics and the way the suspension (and therefore the car) behaves in a particular situation.
Say you are driving across a sidehill and you want to put the high side front tyre over a boulder that is maybe twice the height of the tyre, now imagine the sidehill is steep enough that as that front tyre climbs that rock and the rear suspension unloads on the high side it shifts enough weight to the low side to make the car want to fall over.
Same situation, but with a bit of tension on the rear cable and the unsprung weight is now working on your side to anchor the car. But more importantly, the rear suspension is now pre-loaded to the point where the front end will take up the movement needed to pull the front tyre over the rock instead, as it is free to move around while the rear is very restricted.
There is myriad different situations and uses that could be described, but when it comes down to it, all you are using the cables for is to change the way the car behaves in X situation. I don't use mine that much (maybe half a dozen times over a weekend of driving) but those uses will more than likely stop me needing to reverse up or dig across onto a tamer line, or maybe stop the car falling over due to driver error or the car not behaving the way I feel it should in a certain situation. Cable onto the front axle can be a big help on the bigger, faster vertical climbs too.
In-cab adjustable, disconnectable swaybars might be one way of thinking about it?
Thanks for all the replys everyone.
Im jus gunna give it a go running a pulley setup.
Let ya know how it goes.
Cheers
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Xcab Lux on 37 Treps
Xcab Lux on 37 Treps
my $100 one from supercheap is still doing the job fine.
and Bruce it's for adjusting the height when setup on Airshocks, i don't see a huge advantage putting it on a truck with coils (might help with unloading and also act as a limiting stap)
and Bruce it's for adjusting the height when setup on Airshocks, i don't see a huge advantage putting it on a truck with coils (might help with unloading and also act as a limiting stap)
Outers & Arms up stickers coming soon you hungry bitches!
http://www.myultimate4wd.com
http://www.myultimate4wd.com
GRIMACE wrote:How I miss the days of care free wheelin with the crews!
works for us!!!!Roctoy Designfab wrote:my $100 one from supercheap is still doing the job fine.![]()
and Bruce it's for adjusting the height when setup on Airshocks, i don't see a huge advantage putting it on a truck with coils (might help with unloading and also act as a limiting stap)
you are right though, we do use it as wendle has said and as a limiting strap of sorts, but the trick is to use anchor rope as it has ~35% stretch and allows for less tyre bounce on some climbs.
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Yeah, I must be imagining it wrongly.Wendle wrote:The car will just unload back to ride height or a bit higher depending on the load on the rear springs.chimpboy wrote:Imagine that thing unwinds when you are relying on it.
Having the winches to load up the suspension is a very useful tool, but it isn't really used in the way you seem to be thinking. It is more to change the vehicle dynamics and the way the suspension (and therefore the car) behaves in a particular situation.
Say you are driving across a sidehill and you want to put the high side front tyre over a boulder that is maybe twice the height of the tyre, now imagine the sidehill is steep enough that as that front tyre climbs that rock and the rear suspension unloads on the high side it shifts enough weight to the low side to make the car want to fall over.
Same situation, but with a bit of tension on the rear cable and the unsprung weight is now working on your side to anchor the car. But more importantly, the rear suspension is now pre-loaded to the point where the front end will take up the movement needed to pull the front tyre over the rock instead, as it is free to move around while the rear is very restricted.
There is myriad different situations and uses that could be described, but when it comes down to it, all you are using the cables for is to change the way the car behaves in X situation. I don't use mine that much (maybe half a dozen times over a weekend of driving) but those uses will more than likely stop me needing to reverse up or dig across onto a tamer line, or maybe stop the car falling over due to driver error or the car not behaving the way I feel it should in a certain situation. Cable onto the front axle can be a big help on the bigger, faster vertical climbs too.
In-cab adjustable, disconnectable swaybars might be one way of thinking about it?
I was picturing a situation where the side angle or downhill slope is such that you want to keep your cog (either of the whole vehicle or just the rear) as low to the ground as possible.
So (in my imagination) if the winch gave, your body would bounce up into that higher c-o-g position that you were trying to avoid, but it would be worse than if you'd never winched it down because it would bounce up there with some momentum, increasing your chance of tipping.
This is not legal advice.
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