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How NOT to recover a vehicle

Posted: Sun Jul 12, 2009 8:58 am
by HenryJ

Posted: Sun Jul 12, 2009 9:51 am
by F9K9
Interesting vids. Should be required viewing for all before attempting to make a recovery! I suspect that more injuries and deaths occur during recovery operations than from actual rollovers and the such.

Thanks, Brule!

Posted: Sun Jul 12, 2009 10:19 am
by HenryJ
I suspect that you are right. Recoveries can be very dangerous situations. The forces at work are tremendous. Most have no idea the stored energy waiting to be released.

Winch cable (Youtube - Language!)

Posted: Sun Jul 12, 2009 1:27 pm
by F9K9
It appears that alcohol might have been a factor in that last vid and it is very apparent that there is no time for, even the most athletic reflexes, to dodge that winch cable end. Laying anything over the cable would have reduced the velocity of the cable's end. They make expensive products for it, as you have mentioned before, anything will work. A coat, sleeping bag, old carpet, another tow strap......etc.

Image

Posted: Sun Jul 12, 2009 8:19 pm
by fallvitals
The video with the S10 pulling out the jeep in the snow, I have seen that one before. But never that full video.

Is there a website out there, or book, video, whatever, one good info about wheelin' in general, plus recovery? I do know you want to use recovery straps, without any metal ends or anything, just the looped ends.

Im less then novice about offroad driving, and I think ill be getting into it as soon as im done with my MML, and want to know a little something first.

Posted: Sun Jul 12, 2009 8:32 pm
by HenryJ
The U.S. Army vehicle recovery manual is useful. The Vehicle Dependent Expedition Guide by Tom Sheppard is also a good resource.

Bill Vistas Recovery bible

Warn's Guide to winching

Pirate 4x4 PDF files

Posted: Sun Jul 12, 2009 8:39 pm
by fallvitals
I bookmarked that link, ill check into that Army manual.

Is there any good resources onoffroading in general? Like how to drive in mud, climb steep hill in various conditions, etc, etc?

Posted: Sun Jul 12, 2009 8:43 pm
by HenryJ

Posted: Sun Jul 12, 2009 10:00 pm
by fallvitals
Thats a good link, book marked as well.

But that book costs a small fortune! :shock:


Thanks for the info. Now a dumb question, are all recovery straps equal? (say one at harbor freight vs, XXXX Offroad Store)

Posted: Mon Jul 13, 2009 4:40 am
by HenryJ
fallvitals wrote:...are all recovery straps equal? (say one at harbor freight vs, XXXX Offroad Store)
Probably not. They are rated. As with anything else it is hard to speculate without specifics.

Posted: Mon Jul 13, 2009 8:19 am
by paintballrocker
you should get one that is rated to 3times your vehicles weight, thats what my bro told me. luckly since hes a crane operator i got a rigging strap from his crane thats rate to 50,000lbs for free :lol:

Posted: Tue Jul 14, 2009 4:04 pm
by F9K9
Stu Olson has become a pretty good friend over the last couple of years but, his website has almost become a bible to allot of Jeepers. Manufacturers give him stuff to test and he is pretty straight forward. The first several web pages mainly concern synthetic winch line but, read through them and he will explain the different types of straps and what they are intended to be used for. There's a couple of investigations of synthetic winch line failures mixed into it all. I found it educational and replaced my steel cable almost immediately.

Posted: Fri Jul 24, 2009 2:49 pm
by WVHogRider
fallvitals wrote:Is there any good resources onoffroading in general? Like how to drive in mud, climb steep hill in various conditions, etc, etc?
Fall......You live in WV! You should have plenty of experience wheeling in mud & climbing steep hills. :lol: Kidding of course, I know not everyone gets the same driving experiences/raising as others. Good reads. I also have like a 25 or 50K tractor trailer strap that I use for towing vehicles out & I always throw something over it for that just in case issue. 8)

Posted: Fri Jul 24, 2009 11:52 pm
by fallvitals
WVHogRider wrote:
fallvitals wrote:Is there any good resources onoffroading in general? Like how to drive in mud, climb steep hill in various conditions, etc, etc?
Fall......You live in WV! You should have plenty of experience wheeling in mud & climbing steep hills. :lol: Kidding of course, I know not everyone gets the same driving experiences/raising as others. Good reads. I also have like a 25 or 50K tractor trailer strap that I use for towing vehicles out & I always throw something over it for that just in case issue. 8)
I wish that was the case. I have lived in the damned city all my life. A smaller town, not like "small town USA" small, but small... But its gone to hell in the last 5 years or so. :roll: I have always wanted to live in the country, and dream to one day, with a large piece of land.

Now, when it comes to hiing, I have plenty of experiance! lol. Buddy at work said he would take me out sometime. Which would be very awesome.