GrantBerry
New member
G'day from Qld, Australia; I thought I'd share my little winch-mount project with you all. Vehicle is a Mistubishi FUSO Canter FGB71 , but you could do this on ANY vehicle.
Photos show ONE winch, which can be dis/connected front or rear. (because an engineered cradle was cheaper than a 2nd winch, and also saves on adding to GVM.)
Winch cradle "drawbar" has horizontal hole for rear pin, and a vertical hole for the front pin (the padlock goes through the pin to prevent theft) * Bull-bar was built with "pintle" pin, but you could just as easily have a 'regular' tow-hitch mount on the front, as a few Boaties do.
King-size 500A Anderson plugs are fed from a 450A fuse block mounted by the battery. I used 90mm heavy battery cable cos that's what I had left over from Telephone exchange jobs years ago Winch current draw will depend on load, but I figured 450A fuse will suffice.
Dyneema synthetic winch rope essential, because the unit weighs in at 36kg. Not unwieldy. Quite easy to unplug and move. But steel rope would have made it too heavy.
Added bonus I've discovered, is that to help others, I can take the winch to another vehicles tow-hitch, and use jumper-leads to power it. Likewise, if needed I could chain the winch-mount to a tree, connect battery (or jump to a nearby vehicle) and pull from there.
Photos show ONE winch, which can be dis/connected front or rear. (because an engineered cradle was cheaper than a 2nd winch, and also saves on adding to GVM.)
Winch cradle "drawbar" has horizontal hole for rear pin, and a vertical hole for the front pin (the padlock goes through the pin to prevent theft) * Bull-bar was built with "pintle" pin, but you could just as easily have a 'regular' tow-hitch mount on the front, as a few Boaties do.
King-size 500A Anderson plugs are fed from a 450A fuse block mounted by the battery. I used 90mm heavy battery cable cos that's what I had left over from Telephone exchange jobs years ago Winch current draw will depend on load, but I figured 450A fuse will suffice.
Dyneema synthetic winch rope essential, because the unit weighs in at 36kg. Not unwieldy. Quite easy to unplug and move. But steel rope would have made it too heavy.
Added bonus I've discovered, is that to help others, I can take the winch to another vehicles tow-hitch, and use jumper-leads to power it. Likewise, if needed I could chain the winch-mount to a tree, connect battery (or jump to a nearby vehicle) and pull from there.