AndrewP said:
The WLL are for overhead lifts, yes. Breaking strength is MUCH higher. I always have figured that a rated hook or shackle will not break in a recovery type situation.
True as far as you go. However, overhead lifting generally produces static loads, so that having an industry normal 4X break rating constitutes an adequate safety margin only in a static lift.
But when a static load rated device is used in a dynamic situation, all bets are off. First, it is not that difficult to produce 20,000 pounds of energy with a 5,000 pound vehicle using nothing more than a snatch strap. Typical shackles are rated at 3.5T, and some at 4.5T unless you use the military monster shackles intended for recovering 6x6 trucks. Our typical shackles are rated for 7,000 to 9,500 pounds of static load, without regard to assumptions about safety margins. Obviously it is not impossible to place that much load on the shackle with an ordinary winch of the 8,000 to 9,500 pound rating, even if the load is basically static. If we were working with a lifted load, we would not routinely exceed the working limit of the equipment. Why is it okay to do so with a dynamic load?
Now use the same shackle to capture a sheave in a double line pull. Although the winch cable itself may be under no more strain than the rated pull of the winch (say 8,000 per line), the shackle and whatever you use to attach down line from the pulley is going to have twice the stress. Now you are looking at potentially 16,000 to 19,000 pounds of stress, even if we assume the load to be static. This places the strain on the shackle somewhere well into the safety margin of a 3.5T shackle.
However, vehicle recoveries are never static unless everyone has walked away from the job. Mass in motion causes accelerated strain on the system, and does so in ways that, without measuring equipment, we can not really determine or predict. I would expect that dynamic stress added to a recovery situation is never more with a double line pull than it would be with a single line pull, but even so, if you add 10,000 pounds of momentary strain to an already fully loaded double line recovery, you are very closely approaching the ultimate failure point of a 3.5T rated shackle, even though the winch cable is still within its rated capacity.
It is not always the winch line that fails first, and it is never safe to make assumptions about safety margins. In vehicle recovery we are always using dynamically equipment that is rated statically, and we can not control the variables. Whether the breaking point of a device is or is not MUCH higher than the WLL rating is, in my opinion, not relevant. It is not safe to work above the rating of your equipment.