What winch rope ?

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That wire looks a bit suspect :(

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As does the hook safety latch!

Yes I noticed that

I'm not sure if thats a cut or not tbh, I did notice it in the pic but not on the rope when looking at it.

Going to have a closer look tomorrow anyway, that black bit is grease though I know that much!

Anyway found out the make of control its one of these


Tele Radio - Application finder
 
Nasty, expensive. Say no more, it's a Landy lol

Yeah, all went well, just starting loading rope on properly under tension, heard a crack then a ddrrrrrr as the motor started to smoke!

I was a tad miffed ..
 
It ended last night, not sure on the make of the remote but upon inspection it had some weird name on it.

Its currently sat in the boot of me car so cba checking now

It'll be summit like 'symbol'

If you open the receiver box up and the handset there will be a load of mini switches. by adjusting these you can change the frequency range meaning that unlike the cheaper ebay winch remotes you don't have the risk of somebody elses remote triggering yours. You can also set the buttons to latching or momentary. Usually the in and out are configured as momentary and the emergency stop is latched

Don't get the inside of the control box wet cos they don't like it and they rot out. they also don't like getting shock loaded so make sure it is bolted down well. Overtighten the bolts holding the box down and the box splits.

Rotating beacons interfere with the range of the winch. I used a roof mounted scanner ariel to give my winch a stoopidly long range. This cood be increased even further by holding the handset to the bodywork of the car you are winching so that it acts as an aeriel.;)

Your winch should use 9mm cable. I run my superwinches on 10mm. It still fits in the hole in the drum and gives a much stronger line pull. If you winch continuously for about 10 mins you will get a wisp of pink smoke out of the motor and then it is deaded.:eek::eek::eek:

Don't trust the cable already on the winch. They like to rot from the inside out. I prefer steel to plasma. When fitting a cable to my truck I oil the cable onto the drum and then during the rest of its life, make a point of oiling my cable at least once a fortnight, ideally once week. If I submerge my cable I try and clean and oil it again at the earliest convenience. Most of our guys go through cables like they are water. A cable tends to last me around 3 to 5 years.
 
It'll be summit like 'symbol'

If you open the receiver box up and the handset there will be a load of mini switches. by adjusting these you can change the frequency range meaning that unlike the cheaper ebay winch remotes you don't have the risk of somebody elses remote triggering yours. You can also set the buttons to latching or momentary. Usually the in and out are configured as momentary and the emergency stop is latched

Don't get the inside of the control box wet cos they don't like it and they rot out. they also don't like getting shock loaded so make sure it is bolted down well. Overtighten the bolts holding the box down and the box splits.

Rotating beacons interfere with the range of the winch. I used a roof mounted scanner ariel to give my winch a stoopidly long range. This cood be increased even further by holding the handset to the bodywork of the car you are winching so that it acts as an aeriel.;)

Your winch should use 9mm cable. I run my superwinches on 10mm. It still fits in the hole in the drum and gives a much stronger line pull. If you winch continuously for about 10 mins you will get a wisp of pink smoke out of the motor and then it is deaded.:eek::eek::eek:

Don't trust the cable already on the winch. They like to rot from the inside out. I prefer steel to plasma. When fitting a cable to my truck I oil the cable onto the drum and then during the rest of its life, make a point of oiling my cable at least once a fortnight, ideally once week. If I submerge my cable I try and clean and oil it again at the earliest convenience. Most of our guys go through cables like they are water. A cable tends to last me around 3 to 5 years.


Was Tele Radio so a decent one :) Tele Radio - Application finder

Its a 9.5mm synthetic I need from what I can see as that comes in at 7500Kg, I know its only rated to 3500kg on the winch but 6mm breaks at 3200Kg

Why do you like cable more ? The main thing I'm afraid of is it snapping and twanging back :eek:
 
Was Tele Radio so a decent one :) Tele Radio - Application finder

Its a 9.5mm synthetic I need from what I can see as that comes in at 7500Kg, I know its only rated to 3500kg on the winch but 6mm breaks at 3200Kg

Why do you like cable more ? The main thing I'm afraid of is it snapping and twanging back :eek:

You can listen to the noises the wire makes and that will tell you how much tension it's under. By placing wood to protect the cable you can run it over sharp edges without fear of cutting it.

Keep out the way of a cable and you won't get hurt. Hang a snatch block on a cable and it will help send a snapped cable to the ground. Hang a winch sail, coat, blanket etc over the cable and it will slow the cable down in the event of a break.

Unless you're using a twin battery setup and kicking megga amps out of your alternator the 12v huskys usually stall due to lack of power before the cable breaks. The 24v ones on the other hand.......:eek::eek::eek::D
 
So far as I can see the main drawback with synthetic is it needs to be spooled on cross hatched so needs spooling out and re-spooled after ever use which can be a pain if doing multiple pulls on an tricky recovery
 
You can listen to the noises the wire makes and that will tell you how much tension it's under. By placing wood to protect the cable you can run it over sharp edges without fear of cutting it.

Keep out the way of a cable and you won't get hurt. Hang a snatch block on a cable and it will help send a snapped cable to the ground. Hang a winch sail, coat, blanket etc over the cable and it will slow the cable down in the event of a break.

Unless you're using a twin battery setup and kicking megga amps out of your alternator the 12v huskys usually stall due to lack of power before the cable breaks. The 24v ones on the other hand.......:eek::eek::eek::D

I could always fit a 24V motor into mine :p

No idea what electrics I'll be running not decided on that yet but fair enough, snatch block or blanket sounds like a plan! Was just thinking good rope would be better safety wise but BB's post above may say otherwise if it needs to be spooled in/out properly like fishing line
 
what about degredation due to uv?

Can always chuck a cover over the winch. TBH I'd rather synthetic for the type of use mine gets for the weight saving if nothing else.....apart from the price :eek:

Happy enough with the cable I've got though other than I'd like it shortened to 70' to allow for a longer pull
 
I could always fit a 24V motor into mine :p

No idea what electrics I'll be running not decided on that yet but fair enough, snatch block or blanket sounds like a plan! Was just thinking good rope would be better safety wise but BB's post above may say otherwise if it needs to be spooled in/out properly like fishing line

that looks like a standard length drum which I think takes 75 foot of 9mm rope. The winch on my old 814 flatbed had a long drum and would take 150 foot of 10mm but it had to be spooled on exactly to stop the drum cutting through the cable. On my 814 underlift I wrote off it had a standard length drum and I had to chop 10 foot of cable off to get the cable from my flatbed to fit. When I fit the same cable to my next truck (unless it is a big boy running on 12mm cable) it'll be the third truck and it'll be around 6 years old, It has just 2 wire splinters on it throughout the entire length.
 
that looks like a standard length drum which I think takes 75 foot of 9mm rope. The winch on my old 814 flatbed had a long drum and would take 150 foot of 10mm but it had to be spooled on exactly to stop the drum cutting through the cable. On my 814 underlift I wrote off it had a standard length drum and I had to chop 10 foot of cable off to get the cable from my flatbed to fit. When I fit the same cable to my next truck (unless it is a big boy running on 12mm cable) it'll be the third truck and it'll be around 6 years old, It has just 2 wire splinters on it throughout the entire length.

Yeah presume its all standard so should get 75 on
 
ring piece and crimp :p

You could chop it back and then pin an electrical crimp onto the end of the cable (not a rubbish blue type crimp connector but a propper battery type one). It's the friction of the cable on the drum that actually secures the cable hence minimum of 5 spools left on the drum at all times. The other option is to use the entire length doubled through a snatch block (2 to 1 pull) and then attached to a rope/strop on the object being pulled. This will get more rope off the drum and at the same time take the pressure off the winch.
 
You could chop it back and then pin an electrical crimp onto the end of the cable (not a rubbish blue type crimp connector but a propper battery type one). It's the friction of the cable on the drum that actually secures the cable hence minimum of 5 spools left on the drum at all times. The other option is to use the entire length doubled through a snatch block (2 to 1 pull) and then attached to a rope/strop on the object being pulled. This will get more rope off the drum and at the same time take the pressure off the winch.

you could even go for a floating snatch block system
 
You could chop it back and then pin an electrical crimp onto the end of the cable (not a rubbish blue type crimp connector but a propper battery type one). It's the friction of the cable on the drum that actually secures the cable hence minimum of 5 spools left on the drum at all times. The other option is to use the entire length doubled through a snatch block (2 to 1 pull) and then attached to a rope/strop on the object being pulled. This will get more rope off the drum and at the same time take the pressure off the winch.

Yep....I really should use my snatch block more :doh: Never really think about it unless doing an angled pull.....but that cause I's fick :eek:
 
Ratty, wheres the best place to get good rope from then ?


Still undecided as I can always put a cover over the top to stop the UV problem etc and safety is a nice extra too on synthetic but the price is ridiculous :eek:
 
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