Lots of great ideas and thoughts in this thread.
I've taught a couple of recovery classes for local clubs, while I'm by no means a recovery 'expert', I have done my fair share of recoveries including several high-profile off-road vehicle recoveries where we were basically called in by the BLM/Forest Service to handle a job a regular wrecker service wouldn't take. More than anything I've studied the engineering and physics aspects of recovery operations during my engineering studies. I feel like I have a good general working knowledge of the equipment, I've sold and used many different products from your basic dynamic snatch strap to high end land anchor devices. That said I'm wanting to learn more. I purchased a military vehicle recovery operations text awhile back, I've referenced it in my classes in the past but never really sat down and read it cover for cover. In fact one of the best sections is on safety, something we are all concerned with. I developed my own little mantra of procedure - S.A.F.E,
Survey situation,
Assess tools, vehicles and safety gear on hand,
Formulate extraction need, technique and tools and
Evacuate are and extract. Its simple, serves more as a reminder than gospel but helps I suppose.
Browsing through the military manual I really like their acronym
Reconnoiter area
Estimate situation
Calculate ratio (*they have some very helpful load ratios for various situations)
Obtain resistance
Verify solution
Erect rigging
Recheck rigging
You are ready
*I've found that their ratios could very well be helpful in recovery situation. If nothing else for determining the anticipated loads when recovering a mired rig or righting a rolled vehicle for example. While these ratios are just guidelines and a safety factor should be incorporated, surely they help rule out some recovery situations such as trying to use a non snatch-blocked 6k winch to rescue a wheel depth mired 8k vehicle (stuck to center of hub).
A few of their ratios:
Overturning resistance (righting a rolled rig) = Resistance is 1/2 of the vehicle weight
Wheel Depth Mire (up to wheel hubs) = Resistance is the weigh of vehicle
Fender Depth Mire (top of wheels) = Resistance is 2x weight of vehicle
Cab Depth Mire (over the fenders) = Resistance is 3x weight of vehicle
Grade Resistance = Estimate slope of grade, frictional losses and weight of vehicle to calculate resistance. With losses do to terrain (rocks, mud, etc) the grade resistance can soon exceed the vehicle weight.
Its also got some sections like 'Positioning Gun Tubes for recovery', 'Dual Wheels used as Winch', 'Patching fuel tanks and repairing radiatores', 'Remounting Tracks' and 'Decontaminating chemical defense units'
