would like to get a winch for the jimny but not keen on the idea of hanging something that's 30kg on the front. looking on here people are saying 6000lbs is the minimum for a winch, while others are fitting inexpensive 4000lb ebay jobs.
the winch in the link seems to be quite decent quality, but not sure about it still. the pulling power is about 2 tons, near twice that of the jimny although it'll need the heft if it's genuinely stuck. it seems like a good compromise between weight v power & cost v quality.
any thoughts on it or has any one got any experience with the lightweight 'cheap' winches they can share ? atm my only recovery equipment is a shovel & mobile phone lol, will be getting a snatch strap shortly.
Joined: Fri Jun 06, 2014 8:56 am Posts: 849
Vehicle: 2000 Jimny
Posted: Mon Aug 18, 2014 11:31 am
looks like a good winch at a really good price but it's still 30kgs. my front springs have already sagged an inch just with the bull bar, that's why i'm hesitant of getting a 'proper' winch & the weight that comes with it. it's really a bad compromise i guess.
Im running a RUNVA 4500x in my ute, and it kicks ass. the only issue i had was one i created (2 much rope on the drum) its light, powerful for what it is and also dosnt draw a huge amount (this can be very important at times) it comes with a cool mounting plate and good quality wiring etc, to give you a idea of the size, my free spool leaver is modified but other than that its stock. it dragged the zook sideways out off ruts yesterday, 90' to the car...
i have a cheep ebay 4000lb on my jimny and it has also recovered it many times without a issue! the down fall was it only had like 9mtrs of rope on it! its now got 16 and so far is mint!
Mind us trapping off (we had just been told the winch wouldn't work and was only good for boats) this is a ebay $160 special, it did 3 recoverys on sat, this was buy far the easiest
Joined: Thu Jun 02, 2011 9:53 pm Posts: 361 Location: Independence, MO USA
Vehicle: 1993 RHD Suzuki Escudo Tintop
Posted: Mon Aug 18, 2014 12:31 pm
From experience and research (http://www.innovation-engineering.co.uk/winch_theory.htm or a general search for winch at Ack's FAQ - link in signature), 4000 pounds is not very much when it comes to trying to winch out an SJ/Jimny/3-door Vit. It might be okay for an LJ or an ATV...
8000 pound winches, while bigger (and more expensive), can handle just about any situation you can get into and not break down. You don't buy a winch because it will look good on your truck. You buy a winch to get out of a tough spot when you are a long way from home.
Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2011 2:48 am Posts: 167 Location: Perth
Vehicle: 85 hightop drover
Posted: Mon Aug 18, 2014 3:11 pm
I also have a Runva 4500 on front of the drova, works very well I've recovered My self a few times, manly when I get hung Up on something or if I get crossed up on steep hill, nice safe pull forward To avoid laying it down is really handy!
Joined: Thu Mar 29, 2007 11:30 pm Posts: 14499 Location: Here there everywhere
Vehicle: A manly awesome man jimny
Posted: Mon Aug 18, 2014 8:05 pm
$500 will buy a runva 9500 winch which is what I now have on my jimny. Don't bother messing around with ATV type winches. Even a shitty eBay spec 9500 or bigger winch would be better then anything smaller then a 6000lb winch
Joined: Mon Feb 14, 2011 3:40 am Posts: 95 Location: Canberra
Posted: Wed Aug 20, 2014 10:58 pm
I have the same brand, but smaller on my Sierra. It pulls hard for what it is. Pulled me out of the deep mud 3 times single line, twice double line. It did about 30 full length pulls in one night when my fuel pump was sucking air and it wouldn't run on steep angles. Did 7 full line pulls in a row under batteries without an engine start.
Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2011 2:48 am Posts: 167 Location: Perth
Vehicle: 85 hightop drover
Posted: Fri Aug 22, 2014 8:57 am
Yeah mate pretty simple and removable Just two bits of 4mm angle, on the front And back of the tube that go between the Chassis rails. Bolted thought with 5x m8 bolts.
Then bolted the plate the winch came with To to angle 4x m8 bolts, then bolted the winch Down to thought the plate and the angle Again with 4x m8 bolts.
Joined: Tue Jan 17, 2012 1:40 am Posts: 2979 Location: Darwin, NT
Vehicle: WT sierra, GU CRD
Posted: Fri Aug 22, 2014 11:36 am
Drova wrote:
Yeah mate pretty simple and removable Just two bits of 4mm angle, on the front And back of the tube that go between the Chassis rails. Bolted thought with 5x m8 bolts.
Then bolted the plate the winch came with To to angle 4x m8 bolts, then bolted the winch Down to thought the plate and the angle Again with 4x m8 bolts.
I actually really like the idea of that setup.
How much use has it seen? Would you do it any differently next time? Looks simple, and I'd be able to fit it behind my ally bar....
Edit: just seen your original post in this thread. Hmmm. Wonder if the same can be done with a larger winch.
Joined: Tue Jun 05, 2012 3:41 am Posts: 69 Location: Brazil
Vehicle: Jimny
Posted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 11:21 am
My 2 cents
I've been looking myself for a winch and also don't like the idea of a 30 kg winch in the front of my Jimny. If you have a heavy bull bar as well, it's like having a person there full time. Just don't match vehicle's size and weight...
Mine is a daily drive and light off road, but i do like to be on my own sometimes and was already stuck for nothing in the most ridiculous bump in the middle of nowhere. I'd certainly pay $500 to someone pull me out that day and me and my girlfriend had to walk for hours to find a farm and luckily a tractor to pull us out just before getting dark. So i'm definitely spending $500 on a small winch.
I have researched everywhere about using an ATV winch. Look for at least 4500 lbs (i'm into a 5000 lbs) and good breaks. The modern permanent magnet motors can really take a beat nowadays. They are much slower than a series wound, of course, and may require a double line sometimes or maybe extra rope. They also don't have a steady torque as a series wound, but i believe they will do the job.
I haven't buyed or installed a winch to this day yet. But my personal opinion is that series wound motor winches are just to heavy for Zooks. They only pay out is if are into very serious wheeling. then just handle the weight and high battery drain (which is the biggest problem BTW). It is very troublesome and expensive to fit a large or dual battery and better alternator for some of us. And you probably get f*** first by having your small Zook battery drained out by a series wound than burning a high end permanent magnet motor (if that's their problem).
Conventional wisdom is that a 6k winch is about the lightest winch required for a Suzuki. Jimny's seem to come up to around 1600KG laden, using the industry accepted ratio of 1.5X your vehicle's weight, that's 5280 lbs. The industry also recommends always going to the next size up, not down, so that's how we end up with 6K as the useful minimum.
Remember that the rating for a winch is on the first layer, above that first layer, the winch runs faster but pulls less.
What's the consequence of a winch that's too small? Surely it's just really slow right?
Well, winches that are working right at their load limit are really slow, which is one problem, but they're also right at the limit of their brake capacity. You don't want to winch up out of something and then have the winch slowly lower you back into it once you've let your finger off the button.
I'll also maintain that you're not really saving any power. I'll use Warn as a guide because their data is easy to get hold of. Lets say you need to pull your car 20 feet to get it clear of the hole you are stuck in, and it's really stuck, so it requires 4000lb of pull to get you out. A 4K warn ATV winch will pull at 4 feet per minute whilst using 308 Amps. that's a 5 minute pull at 308 amps: 308X5 = 1540 total amps consumed
Now lets say you fit one of those too big, too heavy, and too power consumptive series wound 6K winches. at 4K that winch is pulling at 12.9 ft/m and consuming 360A. You're winching for just over minute and a half, consuming a total of 550A. That's one third of the power consumed, its less one third of the time spent on the rope.
Which winch requires the big battery and alternator?
Of course, I suppose you could use a snatch block for 1/2 the load - lets work that out.
Well, with a snatch block your ATV winch will pull at 11 feet a minute, and consume 175 amps. Your 20ft pull will take 3.63 minutes 3.63X175= 635 total amps consumed. So that's more power consumed than the 6K, twice the pull time, and you couldn't even do a 20ft pull with an ATV winch on a double line pull without re-rigging because there's only 55' of cable on the drum.
That 175 amp consumption is still three times what your stock alternator can deliver, so I think you'd still want an upgrade.
ATV winches are for ATV's. That's why they are called ATV winches.
I don't have a problem with an experienced club driver messing about with a 4.5K winch, lets say rear mounted or something - a light pull back out of something might be heaps more convenient than rigging a complicated snatch recovery or something (from my experience) but for single vehicle travel ATV winches aren't adequate, require more complicated recovery setups because of the short cable and requirement for a double pull, and still require an upgraded electrical system.
You don't want to take chances with undersized recovery gear if you are into single vehicle travel.
That T Max 4500lb winch would be a better bet than an actual ATV winch, but I wouldn't use one as my primary recovery equipment (IE for single vehicle travel)
Joined: Mon Jun 30, 2014 10:04 pm Posts: 27
Vehicle: Suzuki Sierra
Posted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 9:31 pm
Marko_SJ wrote:
Edit: just seen your original post in this thread. Hmmm. Wonder if the same can be done with a larger winch.
+1 - I'm sort of researching budget options for a winch setup on my sierra... like a lot of people...... and drovers setup definitely appeals to that.... really interested as to the capacity/size of winch you could fit like that...
Joined: Tue Aug 08, 2006 11:30 pm Posts: 5517 Location: Holland Park
Vehicle: Awesome!!
Posted: Sat Aug 23, 2014 10:03 pm
davevet wrote:
Marko_SJ wrote:
Edit: just seen your original post in this thread. Hmmm. Wonder if the same can be done with a larger winch.
+1 - I'm sort of researching budget options for a winch setup on my sierra... like a lot of people...... and drovers setup definitely appeals to that.... really interested as to the capacity/size of winch you could fit like that...
Joined: Tue Jan 17, 2012 1:40 am Posts: 2979 Location: Darwin, NT
Vehicle: WT sierra, GU CRD
Posted: Sun Aug 24, 2014 8:49 pm
JrZook wrote:
davevet wrote:
Marko_SJ wrote:
Edit: just seen your original post in this thread. Hmmm. Wonder if the same can be done with a larger winch.
+1 - I'm sort of researching budget options for a winch setup on my sierra... like a lot of people...... and drovers setup definitely appeals to that.... really interested as to the capacity/size of winch you could fit like that...
Yeah, I've seen the way you mounted yours. Its super neat and I was impressed... I'll probably go down that route to be honest, mounted to the angle like drova.
My only issue is the cross member on the chassis that you knock the tooob through is already bent.
Joined: Tue Jan 17, 2012 1:40 am Posts: 2979 Location: Darwin, NT
Vehicle: WT sierra, GU CRD
Posted: Sun Aug 24, 2014 8:52 pm
Gwagensteve wrote:
I'll play.
Conventional wisdom is that a 6k winch is about the lightest winch required for a Suzuki. Jimny's seem to come up to around 1600KG laden, using the industry accepted ratio of 1.5X your vehicle's weight, that's 5280 lbs. The industry also recommends always going to the next size up, not down, so that's how we end up with 6K as the useful minimum.
Remember that the rating for a winch is on the first layer, above that first layer, the winch runs faster but pulls less.
What's the consequence of a winch that's too small? Surely it's just really slow right?
Well, winches that are working right at their load limit are really slow, which is one problem, but they're also right at the limit of their brake capacity. You don't want to winch up out of something and then have the winch slowly lower you back into it once you've let your finger off the button.
I'll also maintain that you're not really saving any power. I'll use Warn as a guide because their data is easy to get hold of. Lets say you need to pull your car 20 feet to get it clear of the hole you are stuck in, and it's really stuck, so it requires 4000lb of pull to get you out. A 4K warn ATV winch will pull at 4 feet per minute whilst using 308 Amps. that's a 5 minute pull at 308 amps: 308X5 = 1540 total amps consumed
Now lets say you fit one of those too big, too heavy, and too power consumptive series wound 6K winches. at 4K that winch is pulling at 12.9 ft/m and consuming 360A. You're winching for just over minute and a half, consuming a total of 550A. That's one third of the power consumed, its less one third of the time spent on the rope.
Which winch requires the big battery and alternator?
Of course, I suppose you could use a snatch block for 1/2 the load - lets work that out.
Well, with a snatch block your ATV winch will pull at 11 feet a minute, and consume 175 amps. Your 20ft pull will take 3.63 minutes 3.63X175= 635 total amps consumed. So that's more power consumed than the 6K, twice the pull time, and you couldn't even do a 20ft pull with an ATV winch on a double line pull without re-rigging because there's only 55' of cable on the drum.
That 175 amp consumption is still three times what your stock alternator can deliver, so I think you'd still want an upgrade.
ATV winches are for ATV's. That's why they are called ATV winches.
I don't have a problem with an experienced club driver messing about with a 4.5K winch, lets say rear mounted or something - a light pull back out of something might be heaps more convenient than rigging a complicated snatch recovery or something (from my experience) but for single vehicle travel ATV winches aren't adequate, require more complicated recovery setups because of the short cable and requirement for a double pull, and still require an upgraded electrical system.
You don't want to take chances with undersized recovery gear if you are into single vehicle travel.
That T Max 4500lb winch would be a better bet than an actual ATV winch, but I wouldn't use one as my primary recovery equipment (IE for single vehicle travel)
Steve.
I'll make it clear that I was intending to mount a larger winch (around the size you have suggested in many previous winch posts).
I want to use it to self recover on any climbs after an "incident" at one of our local spots, and to do single vehicle recovery if I go bush and get stuck, so it must be reliable.
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