What are the strongest 5/8" hitch pins for recovery use?

Alloy

Well-known member
The legs of the bridle can always be different lengths to allow equal loading while pulling off line.

I prefer a sliding V attachment for this. One needs to take into account the wear and tear of the attachment sliding (no soft shackles) along the bridle. Chain is my fist choice, then nylon and will only use Dyneema for the V bridle if there's a snatch block or no other options.
 

Metcalf

Expedition Leader
I prefer a sliding V attachment for this. One needs to take into account the wear and tear of the attachment sliding (no soft shackles) along the bridle. Chain is my fist choice, then nylon and will only use Dyneema for the V bridle if there's a snatch block or no other options.



Yup, that sawing motion is one of the reasons I don't like equalizing bridles. An equalizing bridle also doesn't provide any redundancy if one of the mounting points was to fail or come unhooked. Attaching something between the two mounting points could provide another layer of safety with an equalizing bridle.

Pretty much every other industry we can draw parallels from as far as safe practices, do not look favorably on lifting ( or catching ) with a bridle that can slide.
 

Alloy

Well-known member
[QUO
Yup, that sawing motion is one of the reasons I don't like equalizing bridles. An equalizing bridle also doesn't provide any redundancy if one of the mounting points was to fail or come unhooked. Attaching something between the two mounting points could provide another layer of safety with an equalizing bridle.

Pretty much every other industry we can draw parallels from as far as safe practices, do not look favorably on lifting ( or catching ) with a bridle that can slide.

It's impossible to balance the loads (recovery not lifting) with fixed legs. No matter what you do one of the legs is going to take all of the load which defeats the purpose of the bridle.

Add a safety for redundancy.
 

Metcalf

Expedition Leader
[QUO


It's impossible to balance the loads (recovery not lifting) with fixed legs. No matter what you do one of the legs is going to take all of the load which defeats the purpose of the bridle.

Add a safety for redundancy.

Generally speaking, if you are hooking an equalized load onto two recovery points where you think a single point would absolutely not take that full load, that is probably the first red flag that things should be reconsidered. Knowingly operating on less than a 2:1 FOS, even on drag recovery, is being pretty dang aggressive.

I haven't had any issues rigging for off line pulls by changing the leg length of the bridle. This is a very common thing that is done in towing, lifting, rope work, etc. Yes, it takes a few minutes more when it is required. The additional bonus is that you CAN load one point more than the other to help the vehicle rotate and react quicker to the input. I notice this trend a lot when using in independent vs equalizing bridles.....the vehicle follows input quicker with an independent leg bridle.

When doing more complex recoveries I also absolutely don't want the vehicle to be able to move anywhere along that bridle. I want the loading points to be unequally loaded so each leg is trying to keep the vehicle in a specific orientation. This is very handy when trying to pull a vehicle more sideways than forward.

One other interesting thing to watch with equalizing bridles is when they 'stick' because of the friction. This happens with just about every combo. This becomes more common as loads increase , and in my experience, you end up right back where you started with a system that behaves much like an independent leg right before it shifts unexpectedly.

I'll keep doing it my way, you keep doing it your way, maybe we will find a new way in the future that keeps us both happy.
 

casioqv

Dr. Diesel
That is an interesting recovery point you have there. All that structure coming down to a single round threaded cross section that will see high bending loads doesn't look like the best plan to me. Bolts typically don't like being loaded in bending. The roots of the treads cause lots of places for fatigue cracks to start. The rest of the structure looks great. Can you bring the 'tube' section much further forward? That increased diameter and reduction in bending will help a ton. Perhaps even find something that will allow connecting to the tube eliminating the threaded/welded adapter completely?

Thank you for all of your feedback and comments.

Well, I just received this in the mail from Eurowise today... an updated version of the VW Touareg/Q7/Cayenne recovery point I showed in the photo earlier. This is a heavy item, with 1" hex bar that fully contacts the equally hefty hex bar on the winch plate. The eye itself is 3/4" steel. So the threaded portion will be only under tension, and no bending forces. Does that seem like a better design?

IMG_1043 copy.jpg
 

Alloy

Well-known member
123
Generally speaking, if you are hooking an equalized load onto two recovery points where you think a single point would absolutely not take that full load, that is probably the first red flag that things should be reconsidered. Knowingly operating on less than a 2:1 FOS, even on drag recovery, is being pretty dang aggressive.

I haven't had any issues rigging for off line pulls by changing the leg length of the bridle. This is a very common thing that is done in towing, lifting, rope work, etc. Yes, it takes a few minutes more when it is required. The additional bonus is that you CAN load one point more than the other to help the vehicle rotate and react quicker to the input. I notice this trend a lot when using in independent vs equalizing bridles.....the vehicle follows input quicker with an independent leg bridle.

When doing more complex recoveries I also absolutely don't want the vehicle to be able to move anywhere along that bridle. I want the loading points to be unequally loaded so each leg is trying to keep the vehicle in a specific orientation. This is very handy when trying to pull a vehicle more sideways than forward.

One other interesting thing to watch with equalizing bridles is when they 'stick' because of the friction. This happens with just about every combo. This becomes more common as loads increase , and in my experience, you end up right back where you started with a system that behaves much like an independent leg right before it shifts unexpectedly.

I'll keep doing it my way, you keep doing it your way, maybe we will find a new way in the future that keeps us both happy.

I don't have a my way. Sometimes I start with one and switch to the other.

Is sliding best? No.
Does sliding work? Yes.
Does fixed leg work? Yes.
Can sliding be turned into fixed leg and back to sliding? Yes
Can fixed leg be turned into sliding? No

Are loads balanced on sliding? Yes.
 

Metcalf

Expedition Leader
Thank you for all of your feedback and comments.

Well, I just received this in the mail from Eurowise today... an updated version of the VW Touareg/Q7/Cayenne recovery point I showed in the photo earlier. This is a heavy item, with 1" hex bar that fully contacts the equally hefty hex bar on the winch plate. The eye itself is 3/4" steel. So the threaded portion will be only under tension, and no bending forces. Does that seem like a better design?

View attachment 769532

It looks 'better', but that is still a long relatively thin design that will have significant loads on it when pulling off-line. We always like to say that recoveries will only be in a straight line, but I commonly see anything but that. If it is the only option, I would just be aware of all that when putting it into use.
 

DirtWhiskey

Western Dirt Rat
When searching for the "strongest" hardware many people look at grade 8 as the standard. Well grade 8 has the highest tensile strength rating, it is also much more brittle than grade 5. Grade 5 will stretch before it fails. Not ideal but I would rather have a jammed hitch than multiple lbs of steel flying through the air.
 
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Metcalf

Expedition Leader
When searching for the "strongest" hardware many people look at grade 8 as the standard. Well grade 8 has the highest tensile strength rating, it is also much more brittle than grade 5. Grade 5 will stretch before it fails. Not ideal but I would rather have a jammed hitch than multiple lbs of steel flying through the air.

Brittle is not the right term. Elongation maybe.

A properly supported pin is failing in shear however, not bending. And in shear, all the calcs are done based on tensile strength.

Even in bending, we need to be VERY careful with suggesting 'grade 5' material would be 'better' than 'grade 8'. If the material could bend sooner, it could also keep deforming and will eventually pull out of the holes if unsupported. The little clip does not provide any extra strength to keep this from happening. In the end, a 'grade 5' fastener will always fail before a 'grade 8' fastener. There is very little chance you will know when to 'stop' the event that would result in a bending failure before the ultimate failure. I would just think of Grade 8 as stronger overall.....and any event that would cause a failure of grade 8 material would LONG since have completely failed a grade 5 fastener or pin bending or not.

Generally speaking however, I think most good quality hitch pins on the market are similar in material properties to a Grade 5 fastener. I don't think a grade 8 pin would be bad, but even at grade 5 strength, we are already more than 2x as strong as the base materials used in the hitch tube and the welded assembly.
 

casioqv

Dr. Diesel
I don't understand the advantage of a fixed leg double bridle. For an even slightly off center pull, the vehicle will be rotating during the recovery, so only one leg will have all of the force at a given time. The extra leg would serve only as a backup to keep the vehicle from rolling away if the tensioned leg failed... but it's hard to say if that would be the failure point vs elsewhere in the system. A sliding bridle doesn't offer the redundancy, but also puts half the load on each recovery point. It would seem to me that preventing failure would be more valuable than having an unlikely to be useful partial redundancy.

I have been thinking that in the age of synthetic lines and wireless remotes, in many situations it may be safest for vehicle recovery to be totally 'unmanned,' with everybody far away from the vehicle, and no driver. In this case, the vehicle itself could have a second safety line always in the uphill direction that is belayed out manually, like a rock climber. This would be a 100% redundant system sharing no points in common with the main recovery line.

Metcalf - I've been reading through offroad recovery techniques on here and have learned a lot reading things you've written in the past. Thanks!
 

Metcalf

Expedition Leader
I don't understand the advantage of a fixed leg double bridle. For an even slightly off center pull, the vehicle will be rotating during the recovery, so only one leg will have all of the force at a given time. The extra leg would serve only as a backup to keep the vehicle from rolling away if the tensioned leg failed... but it's hard to say if that would be the failure point vs elsewhere in the system. A sliding bridle doesn't offer the redundancy, but also puts half the load on each recovery point. It would seem to me that preventing failure would be more valuable than having an unlikely to be useful partial redundancy.

I have been thinking that in the age of synthetic lines and wireless remotes, in many situations it may be safest for vehicle recovery to be totally 'unmanned,' with everybody far away from the vehicle, and no driver. In this case, the vehicle itself could have a second safety line always in the uphill direction that is belayed out manually, like a rock climber. This would be a 100% redundant system sharing no points in common with the main recovery line.

Metcalf - I've been reading through offroad recovery techniques on here and have learned a lot reading things you've written in the past. Thanks!

My general take on fixed or equalizing bridles. If I know I am going to be pulling off line, rigging the bridle to have 'proper' leg length to have roughly equal forces is worth it. This does a few things. 1- This does provide true redundancy if one point was to fail, however, we should never be rigging or operating an attachment point for vehicle recovery under a 2:1 Factor of safety knowingly. 2- A fixed bridle will help prevent the vehicle from spinning out of your control AND force the vehicle to spin in the direction you want it to quicker.

Commonly, a lot of people think of bridles as only being used on bumpers for something like a kinetic rope recovery. That is a great use for them, one of the reasons is that works so well is because it gets the rope to the middle of the vehicle. As far as strength....see #1 above. With questionable recovery points by all means use a bridle, but if they are questionable, wouldn't having the redundancy of a fixed bridle be better? Personally, I don't think rigging around the idea of doing a max effort offline pull, that is constantly changing directions, is THAT likely. I find it much more likely do be doing high force pulls in a known direction where I really don't want the vehicle to be able to equalize itself.....think pulling the vehicle mostly sideways from the frame and/or bumpers and you absolutely don't want the vehicle to be able to pivot one way or the other over the shoulder of a road.

There are some very real issues with equalizing bridles that are getting glossed over a bit I want to touch on. 1b- The movement between the two 'lines', be it strap on strap, strap on rope, rope on rope, etc....all cause high levels of wear at low loads. If the bridle IS actually trying to equalize itself consistently, it will wear itself out over time even under very low loads. rope on rope connections that move are generally regarded as a no-no across all industries and sports. We know that causes issues over time even at low loads and shortens the service life of the item. To solve this problem, you have to add extra items ( typically something like a pulley ) into the rigging which then adds mass which is not only a safety issue, but also another item of gear you have to have wear on, wear out, and make sure will reset itself under this constant changing force direction and loads. 2b - At high load levels, the friction between the rope/strap connection will lock up, causing uneven loading anyways, then suddenly release causing rapid movements. As mentioned in 1b, you can add something into the system to help with this, but then you have more mass ( probably metal moving parts) and connection points in the system. You also have to worry about that device skipping down the road if you are doing something like a tow/kinetic recovery.

I hope that helps explain my position on things a bit more. So far, I have never had a situation where I have broken a mounting point with either style of bridle rigging. I HAVE had connection points come loose ( hooks and hard shackles) more than once though. In those cases, the equalizing bridle caused a total disconnect as it pulled through, while the fixed bridle remained connected on one side and the connection to the vehicle.

Cheers. Thanks for the interesting topic to babble about.
 

DirtWhiskey

Western Dirt Rat
Brittle is not the right term. Elongation maybe.

A properly supported pin is failing in shear however, not bending. And in shear, all the calcs are done based on tensile strength.

Even in bending, we need to be VERY careful with suggesting 'grade 5' material would be 'better' than 'grade 8'. If the material could bend sooner, it could also keep deforming and will eventually pull out of the holes if unsupported. The little clip does not provide any extra strength to keep this from happening. In the end, a 'grade 5' fastener will always fail before a 'grade 8' fastener. There is very little chance you will know when to 'stop' the event that would result in a bending failure before the ultimate failure. I would just think of Grade 8 as stronger overall.....and any event that would cause a failure of grade 8 material would LONG since have completely failed a grade 5 fastener or pin bending or not.

Generally speaking however, I think most good quality hitch pins on the market are similar in material properties to a Grade 5 fastener. I don't think a grade 8 pin would be bad, but even at grade 5 strength, we are already more than 2x as strong as the base materials used in the hitch tube and the welded assembly.

Great points but I'll say from experience that Grade 8 is way more prone to brittle breakage than Grade 5. That's why Grade 5 is called out in many applications and specify not to use 8. As somebody who has replaced grade 8 with grade 5 bolts because of breakage and lack of clamping stretch, lack of reusability in bolt applications I can attest to that. Cost savings of grade 5 aren't that significant, so why don't we just use Grade 8 everywhere? Again depends on application and engineering call outs.

I know nothing really and you're probably right, I'm sure in this application the welds will fail before the pin. But I'll stand by my preference for bending rather than breaking in winching.
 

Ugly1

Member
Great points but I'll say from experience that Grade 8 is way more prone to brittle breakage than Grade 5. That's why Grade 5 is called out in many applications and specify not to use 8. As somebody who has replaced grade 8 with grade 5 bolts because of breakage and lack of clamping stretch, lack of reusability in bolt applications I can attest to that. Cost savings of grade 5 aren't that significant, so why don't we just use Grade 8 everywhere? Again depends on application and engineering call outs.

I know nothing really and you're probably right, I'm sure in this application the welds will fail before the pin. But I'll stand by my preference for bending rather than breaking in winching.
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 close to match the strength of the high strength pins.
 

Ugly1

Member
Just trying to move the weak link to the frame?
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 I'm looking at, seem far more likely to be the next weakest link in the chain that I'm considering, that is if I removed my current factory dodge hitch weak link. Am I wrong?
 
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