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What winch do you prefer? Hand winch or electric? Why? I use a 8000lb hand winch that is used on the farm. My reasons being its light, cheap, will fit under my rear seat with other recovery gear and can be used anywhere
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I tend to openly badmouth winches as being quite overrated. I still think they are, and I still think there are way too many near-stock rigs out there running winches that have never even had the cable spooled out except in the driveway, all because they were told they need to have one "just in case."One is none and two is one. Everything fails. If it’s your self recovery gear then you can get yourself into a real bind in a hurry.
I travel alone most of the time so I don’t have the benefit of help from another rig. I have had winches fail me in the past as well as hand winches and even high lift jacks.
On my current rig I have a front and rear winch, one hydraulic and one electric. That’s mostly due to the size of the truck and it’s use (1995 hmmwv). On top I have a high lift jack and in the tool box I have a come-a-long as well.
That’s overkill I understand but I use the come-a-long for all sorts of stuff since it’s light and easy. It’s more of a tool than a recovery method. The high lift is so dangerous it’s a tool of last resort l, but I have it and maintain it. The winches are there to get me out of a bind, move trees and or whatever silly situation I get myself into. In the southeast US we have mud, and it sucks. There is no getting around sliding into a rut from time to time. A winch sure makes life easier.
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A 17,500 pound Smittybilt X20 GEN 2with cable rope in a ARB bull bar in a 2003 Silverado 2500HD 4x4 diesel extra cab, so this vehicle has some weight to it. Hence the big winch.What winch do you prefer? Hand winch or electric? Why? I use a 8000lb hand winch that is used on the farm. My reasons being its light, cheap, will fit under my rear seat with other recovery gear and can be used anywhere
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I thought the same thing back when I could always find someone to wheel with. I've gone out solo enough in recent years I decided to go ahead and have one just in case. Nothing less fun than being hung out by yourself with the family in tow. Now that's less of a worry. And the winch was about $1k where lockers and the associated parts for my build would have been $5k with me doing the work.I tend to openly badmouth winches as being quite overrated. I still think they are, and I still think there are way too many near-stock rigs out there running winches that have never even had the cable spooled out except in the driveway, all because they were told they need to have one "just in case."
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