winkosmosis
Explorer
The consensus seems to be that you need a winch rated between 1.5x-2.0x vehicle weight. I don't really buy it and here is my reasoning:
---I'm not sure that the experts who say "you need 1.5x vehicle weight" understand the physics
Examples
http://www.ehow.com/how-does_4926305_a-winch-work.html
http://docs.google.com/gview?a=v&q=.../whichwinch.pdf+winch+pull+rating&hl=en&gl=us
They seem to be assuming that a 5000lb winch can only pull a 5000lb vehicle on a flat surface, and that any slope or rough terrain increases the effective vehicle weight. Anyone who has ever pushed a car knows that isn't true. It doesn't take much force to roll a vehicle on flat ground, and that increases with incline, up to a max of 1.0x vehicle weight when pulling
straight upward.
OK, if the vehicle is stuck behind a big rock or something, you could need more force than the weight. But wouldn't that be enough force to break things? Hell, folks break axles by applying much less force than that. Aren't you better off trying to shift the vehicle so it's not lodged behind something?
---If the vehicle were actually hung from its winch, would the winch bumper's mounts survive? On a unibody vehicle like an XJ, I'm sure the mounts would break or bend. So why would you ever apply 1.5x that force?
The same goes for a hitch-mounted winch. A class III hitch is rated to pull a 5000lb trailer, but not pull it straight up a cliff. Also, the tongue load rating is usually something like 500lb. A 5000lb winch pulling at a slight upward or downward angle should easily exceed that.
I definitely wouldn't want someone applying that much force to my independently mounted front tow hooks.
Am I missing something?
---I'm not sure that the experts who say "you need 1.5x vehicle weight" understand the physics
Examples
http://www.ehow.com/how-does_4926305_a-winch-work.html
http://docs.google.com/gview?a=v&q=.../whichwinch.pdf+winch+pull+rating&hl=en&gl=us
They seem to be assuming that a 5000lb winch can only pull a 5000lb vehicle on a flat surface, and that any slope or rough terrain increases the effective vehicle weight. Anyone who has ever pushed a car knows that isn't true. It doesn't take much force to roll a vehicle on flat ground, and that increases with incline, up to a max of 1.0x vehicle weight when pulling
straight upward.
OK, if the vehicle is stuck behind a big rock or something, you could need more force than the weight. But wouldn't that be enough force to break things? Hell, folks break axles by applying much less force than that. Aren't you better off trying to shift the vehicle so it's not lodged behind something?
---If the vehicle were actually hung from its winch, would the winch bumper's mounts survive? On a unibody vehicle like an XJ, I'm sure the mounts would break or bend. So why would you ever apply 1.5x that force?
The same goes for a hitch-mounted winch. A class III hitch is rated to pull a 5000lb trailer, but not pull it straight up a cliff. Also, the tongue load rating is usually something like 500lb. A 5000lb winch pulling at a slight upward or downward angle should easily exceed that.
I definitely wouldn't want someone applying that much force to my independently mounted front tow hooks.
Am I missing something?
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