Most of the Smittybilt hook is over an inch thick. They do not have the thinner areas in the middle of the body like that USCargo and most rigging hooks I've seen . Who knows, maybe the Chinese grade 80 is inferior but they sure do seem to use a lot of it in the construction. These things look...
Not made in thed USA but they come up for just over $30 on occasion. Both ends of a tree saver easily fit in there and it's big enough so it fits over one of my vertical fairlead rollers so most of it tucks in there pretty nicely between the horizontal rollers...
Couldn't tell you. I've never sold or bought any, personally. Nor can I tell you about the applications of the customers of those who do sell them. Though looking at my trucks frame I'm not so sure that would be the case. My eneducated mind is telling me the 30klbish range, the 1" kinetic ropes...
Presumably the designers (engineers?) of the grade 8 hitch pins figure there is a need for such things, or at least a market. But it's not as though the examples I've seen are being sold at take the money and run pricing. Maybe their customers have better quality hitches installed that can come...
Hmm. This idea that a 30klbish MBS synthetic recovery line can be thought of as a fuse, while using a factory class IV hitch that fails somewhere under 25klb's, seems a bit flawed. Even the class V I'm looking at will be barely enough for the dynamic ropee I'm looking at. The safety margin...
Weirdly my hitch, recievers or my pin didn't come with any instructions telling me how failures will happen. And when they do, I had no clue it could be assumed they will all behave the same, as yours did, under the varying conditions I am likely to put them through. And maybe even weirder I had...
That is a good thread, thanks. Though they never realy delve specifically into the pins very deeply.
I think you could argue that whichever method you decide to go with, and there seems to be some pretty good ideas on that thread for sure, they all could potentially be even safer with stronger...
Dodge 2500, Gas engine. Maybe 6000lbs up to 8000 loaded for camping. As before, not an ME. I thought my question was clear. Not looking for engineering data, but recomendations for better hitch pins. Thanks for the info about shear vs tensile. My intention was not to rewrite the rules but to...
You forgot to quote the rest where I warned everyone I, I'm not an expert in the subject. I thought that might clue people in but great catch. Do you happen to have any advice relevant to the topic of the thread?
Whatever the Dodge factory decided to bolt on the factory Class IV hitch with. They look fine though I will probably upgrade to the TorkLift class V and all new hardware at some point but for other reasons. What do you know about hitch pins ofd the sort I linked?
I'm definitely not an ME so please bear with me.
A well known supplier touts their stainless 303 hitch pins and even rate them. They have the highest breaking strength rating of any of the pins I've found, where the manufacturer lists those numbers.
I'm noticing farm supply shops with Grade 8...
Thank you very much for sharing your wisdom on this stuff and the data regarding your testing.
You make a very strong point abbout removing as many as possible heavy metalic objects, which could have incredibly huge potential energies when line tension is high. You seem to have swayed me in...
Yeah. Their answer is weak sauce. Not satisfying. Left out important detail I am after.
I was looking at your site and your soft shackle reciever adapter idea looks good. Have you ever tested any of the 2" versions to the point of failure?
Pragmatically, the Bulldog shank only needs to be...
lol check it out. eTrailer gave me my own webpage.
https://www.etrailer.com/question-680232.html
hmm. Is that your qualified legal opinion there, Mr Jon G @ eTrailer? haha prerty cool. my 15 minutes is now!
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