• Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!

  • Microsoft MSN, Live, Hotmail, Outlook email users may not be receiving emails. We are working to resolve this issue. Please add support@steelsoldiers.com to your trusted contacts.

Never underestimate the power of physics on your 20k winch

msgjd

Well-known member
1,112
3,414
113
Location
upstate ny
It all comes down to physics, which was a high school subject I only spent two weeks in .. It was not that I couldn't grasp it, but it became obvious it was going to suck up all of my allowable homework time. There is little time for school work when you are raised on a farm having little choice but to use methods and equipment stuck in a 1920's-50's timeframe.. And in that, you learn hoisting and all kinds of handy old-time ways of necessity because you do not have access to modern equipment nor fancy tools ..

To save a young new driver his job, there are no pictures to post of today's mishap, but I assure you it was a sight to see.. I preface this by saying there was 5 inches of rain in the last 24hrs, it was pouring and poor visibility as he was headed to the receiver's place with a 45ft flatbed of palletized stone and building materials .. The old town road to get there is dirt and narrow, takes a skilled driver to traverse it without trouble.. He admitted he did not get out and walk ahead to look over the situation, nor did he wait for the rain let up so he could see better. He could not see anything in his mirrors since it was raining so hard. On a very tight reverse-curve, he managed to put the entire left side of the trailer wheelset into a deep ditch and the entire left leg of the landing gear against the inlet of a 4ft-round culvert. Luckily he had made an LTL delivery the hour before thus the back half of the trailer was empty , except for his Tag-a-Long forklift. One midspan pallet of building materials had broken free and lay on the far bank of the ditch, but the pallets of stone and other items remained on the front half. The trailer showed an impressive amount of flexibility midspan because the tractor was still up on the road, kingpin intact, yet the back end of trailer was twisted at a 40-degree slant from horizontal..

I eventually came across this pathetic sight.. The poor guy was in a panic to say the least.. There was no cell service, no neighbors nearer than a mile, no traffic, and any big hook was over an hour away including my M62 .. Many professional drivers have at least one major F-Up during their career, myself included, and a fresh driver should never have been sent onto a road like this, that particular carrier's dispatcher has been warned about the road before.. Let's just say with reverse curves on a road where two cars can barely squeeze by each other, plus a hairpin curve in there as well and a turnaround at the receiver's place that barely can handle a 53ft trailer, it's no place for an Effengee.. Well, heavy recovery, hoisting, and rollovers are nothing new to me thus I had to at least try to get his trailer slid back up onto the old town road.. Yes, liability comes to mind and has to be considered, but the ditch and shoulder was muddy and slick enough, a normal attempt just might work.. If anything looked like it was to break or be dangerous, I will always say "sorry no" to a stranger... If the back half of the trailer had been loaded there was no way I would have attempted it, and using an M817 instead of the M62 was going to be a challenge all its own.. Driver managed to get the Tag-a-Long disconnected from the back of the trailer but it was also buried in the mud and running water and leaning heavy to one side like the back of the trailer in that 4ft-deep x 6ft-wide ditch .. My M817's winch has a level-winder but no tensioner... This was a good thing because it allowed for some unusual physics to come into play with this style winch. Remember physics? This is a story about physics.

Re-routing the hook-end of the cable over the top of the bumper and so that it was no longer involved with the bottom roller, this put the entire pivot point onto the level-winder sheave.. I did not use the winch gears to pull.. Instead, we used it for leverage and traction by making the hitch short as possible, the cable would stay at an adequate upwards angle to not damage the sheave guide, and it would provide an upwards lift of the ditch-side of the victims in concert with the pull.. Thanks to the added weight put upon its front axle due to the new routing of the cable, the empty M817 managed to back up in low range at an idle with just a very little wheel slip on the rears, thus the Tag-a-Long slid semi-sideways up and out of the ditch, needing every bit of the uplift and angle of pull the M817 could give it .. Physics.

Next, getting the rear wheels of the half-loaded trailer up and out of there was obviously going to require the help of the tractor truck .. When I inquired, I was pleased to hear the truck had cross-lockers (as well as diff-lock) and I hate to say this but I was glad it was an automatic. Thusly, the driver was able to give the trailer a steady controlled push backwards with minimum wheelslip as the physics of the winch cable routing and the M817's sure-footedness provided the lift and pull needed to get the trailer wheels slid semi-sideways up out of the ditch and back onto the road. I am amazed the cable or something else on the winch did not snap.. Also, his trailer frame and bracing appeared intact and straight after it was on the level.. The driver was beyond grateful .. His delivery point was another 1/8th-mile and I suggested he and the receiver's heavy equipment mechanic/welder inspect his trailer for cracks, broken welds, bolts, etc after he got unloaded, and before he went anywhere else. Like a good sergeant I told him every driver has his first really bad day and this was his, he was alive, nothing seems to be busted, got the dumped pallet reloaded, that he was to learn from it, and unlike truck school, real life has no limit on how many "get outs" a driver should take when a situation is in question... There were no names nor pictures taken, no witnesses, and no way this sort of thing could ever have gone as well as it did had there been traffic.. Not one vehicle passed. Nothing but two trucks in pouring rain surrounded by mud and trees.. Hey, that sounds like springtime in the army I was in !! The only thing lacking was the giant mosquitoes and C-rats
 
Last edited:

Mullaney

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
Supporting Vendor
7,769
19,877
113
Location
Charlotte NC
It all comes down to physics, which was a high school subject I only spent two weeks in .. It was not that I couldn't grasp it, but it became obvious it was going to suck up all of my allowable homework time. There is little time for school work when you are raised on a farm having little choice but to use methods and equipment stuck in a 1920's-50's timeframe.. And in that, you learn hoisting and all kinds of handy old-time ways of necessity because you do not have access to modern equipment nor fancy tools ..

To save a young new driver his job, there are no pictures to post of today's mishap, but I assure you it was a sight to see.. I preface this by saying there was 5 inches of rain in the last 24hrs, it was pouring and poor visibility as he was headed to the receiver's place with a 45ft flatbed of palletized stone and building materials .. The old town road to get there is dirt and narrow, takes a skilled driver to traverse it without trouble.. He admitted he did not get out and walk ahead to look over the situation, nor did he wait for the rain let up so he could see better. He could not see anything in his mirrors since it was raining so hard. On a very tight reverse-curve, he managed to put the entire left side of the trailer wheelset into a deep ditch and the entire left leg of the landing gear against the inlet of a 4ft-round culvert. Luckily he had made an LTL delivery the hour before thus the back half of the trailer was empty , except for his Tag-a-Long forklift. One midspan pallet of building materials had broken free and lay on the far bank of the ditch, but the pallets of stone and other items remained on the front half. The trailer showed an impressive amount of flexibility midspan because the tractor was still up on the road, kingpin intact, yet the back end of trailer was twisted at a 40-degree slant from horizontal..

I eventually came across this pathetic sight.. The poor guy was in a panic to say the least.. There was no cell service, no neighbors nearer than a mile, no traffic, and any big hook was over an hour away including my M62 .. Every professional driver has at least one major F-Up in his entire career and a fresh driver should never have been sent onto a road like this, that particular carrier's dispatcher has been warned about the road before.. Let's just say with reverse curves on a road where two cars can barely squeeze by each other, plus a hairpin curve in there as well and a turnaround at the receiver's place that barely can handle a 53ft trailer, it's no place for an Effengee.. Well, heavy recovery, hoisting, and rollovers are nothing new to me thus I had to at least try to get his trailer slid back up onto the old town road.. Yes, liability comes to mind and has to be considered, but the ditch and shoulder was muddy and slick enough, a normal attempt just might work.. If anything looked like it was to break or be dangerous, I will always say "sorry no" to a stranger... If the back half of the trailer had been loaded there was no way I would have attempted it, and using an M817 instead of the M62 was going to be a challenge all its own.. Driver managed to get the Tag-a-Long disconnected from the back of the trailer but it was also buried in the mud and running water and leaning heavy to one side like the back of the trailer in that 4ft-deep x 6ft-wide ditch .. My M817's winch has a level-winder but no tensioner... This was a good thing because it allowed for some unusual physics to come into play with this style winch. Remember physics? This is a story about physics.

Re-routing the hook-end of the cable over the top of the bumper and so that it was no longer involved with the bottom roller, this put the entire pivot point onto the level-winder sheave.. I did not use the winch gears to pull.. Instead, we used it for leverage and traction by making the hitch short as possible, the cable would stay at an adequate upwards angle to not damage the sheave guide, and it would provide an upwards lift of the ditch-side of the victims in concert with the pull.. Thanks to the added weight put upon its front axle, the empty M817 managed to back up in low range at an idle without any noticeable wheel slip, thus the Tag-a-Long slid semi-sideways up and out of the ditch, needing every bit of the uplift and angle of pull the M817 could give it .. Physics.

Next, getting the rear wheels of the half-loaded trailer up and out of there was obviously going to require the help of the tractor truck .. When I inquired, I was pleased to hear the truck had cross-lockers (as well as diff-lock) and I hate to say this but I was glad it was an automatic. Thusly, the driver was able to give the trailer a steady controlled push backwards with minimum wheelslip as the physics of the winch cable routing and the M817's sure-footedness provided the lift and pull needed to get the trailer wheels slid semi-sideways up out of the ditch and back onto the road. I am amazed the cable or something else on the winch did not snap.. Also, his trailer frame and bracing appeared intact and straight after it was on the level.. The driver was beyond grateful .. His delivery point was another 1/8th-mile and I suggested he and the receiver's heavy equipment mechanic/welder inspect his trailer for cracks, broken welds, bolts, etc after he got unloaded, and before he went anywhere else. Like a good sergeant I told him every driver has his first really bad day and this was his, he was alive, nothing seems to be busted, got the dumped pallet reloaded, that he was to learn from it, and unlike truck school, real life has no limit on how many "get outs" a driver should take when a situation is in question... There were no names nor pictures taken, no witnesses, and no way this sort of thing could ever have gone as well as it did had there been traffic.. Not one vehicle passed. Nothing but two trucks in pouring rain surrounded by mud and trees.. Hey, that sounds like springtime in the army I was in !! The only thing lacking was the giant mosquitoes and C-rats
.
All I can say is Wow.
Skills and Logic won the day.
 

msgjd

Well-known member
1,112
3,414
113
Location
upstate ny
.
All I can say is Wow.
Skills and Logic won the day.
Thanks, and yes logic .. But skill? Skill perhaps in the sense I am always a bit apprehensive every time with any "advanced" recovery, and take my time to think things through and visualize what each possible method is going to result in, good and bad, as there are a lot of "what-if's" .. Many of the recoveries I had done were their own animal with a unique challenge, almost as if doing it the very first-time.. But I believe in luck and unluck, and yesterday there was a helluva lot of luck involved, it wasn't an easy pull but it went easier than expected, the slick mud sure helped getting things to slide sideways.. It apparently was raining too hard for ol' Murphy to dare show his face, since he sometimes stops by for a spell as an unwelcome guest .. I really doubted the M817 was gonna do the job, but I just had to try. Had also doubted the level-winder and cable was going to hold up to the weight and tension.. Therefore, I under-estimated my equipment and doubted there was going to be enough physics available from it to do the task, hence the posting title... But re-routing the cable did the trick .. I did not have the "normal" tool available for the job that day, but we improvised and got it done.. I still cannot believe there was no apparent damage to anything. I truly hope this young new driver goes on to never be embarrassed to get out and look, as many times as it takes, no matter what. Nor to be over-confident about what his trailer (and load) is doing back there
 
Last edited:

msgjd

Well-known member
1,112
3,414
113
Location
upstate ny
Well written story too! That's rare these days.
thank you .. with comments like this I am reminded I am an actual published author and photographer in a certain monthly historical (rail) transportation magazine and their calendars .. To me it's no big deal, I am nobody special, just someone who shared certain stories and events.. Hated English class and never had a photo class.. go figure. Hated "creative writing" and term papers. But with old age I enjoy painting pictures with words, with the goal for people to see what was seen
 
Last edited:

Mullaney

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
Supporting Vendor
7,769
19,877
113
Location
Charlotte NC
thank you .. with comments like this I am reminded I am an actual published author and photographer in a certain monthly historical (rail) transportation magazine and their calendars .. To me it's no big deal, I am nobody special, just someone who shared certain stories and events.. Hated English class and never had a photo class.. go figure. Hated "creative writing" and term papers. But with old age I enjoy painting pictures with words, the goal for people to see what was seen
.
Yes Sir!

I remember those days. Back where diagramming sentences, proper structure, and a lot of "wasted time" was spent. My goal in school sure wasn't writing anything if I could help it... Funny how things change with time and age.
 

ToddJK

Well-known member
1,321
4,518
113
Location
Sparta, MI
Good job! Glad someone with some experience and knowledge was there to help and hopefully that young driver gained some valuable information and lessons. This kinda reminds me of a few recovery channels I like to watch. Their methods of madness to do the job stuns me at times.
 

msgjd

Well-known member
1,112
3,414
113
Location
upstate ny
rofl Arlo's head went places nobody else would ever fathom, let-alone sing about... There is no way I can go out and operate a winch now. Remember the winch? We have to stay on topic and this thread is about a winch. Errr, physics.

all-physics-formulas-pdf-physics-formulas-page-0011.jpg
 
Last edited:

msgjd

Well-known member
1,112
3,414
113
Location
upstate ny
Used the M817 winch this morning to assist a tree felling , seems to be working just fine after that dead-pull last month .. (y) keeping fingers crossed .. not too worried, have a few parts winches with busted cases the highway depts apparently got too ambitious with
 
Last edited:

Superthermal

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
314
856
93
Location
Utah, Murray, United States
Used the M817 winch this morning to assist a tree felling , seems to be working just fine after that dead-pull last month .. (y) keeping fingers crossed .. not too worried, have a few parts winches with busted cases the highway depts apparently got too ambitious with
Are the cases broken from the front vertical guide rollers being slamed into the ground? I have seen some photos and one in person where the vertical side rollers were busted clean off. Makes me want to mount my winch (still need some $$ for parts) so it feeds out above the bumper. Just curious.
 

msgjd

Well-known member
1,112
3,414
113
Location
upstate ny
Are the cases broken from the front vertical guide rollers being slamed into the ground?
these busted cases appear to have been caused by the hwy depts using a wheel loader bucket to shove the trucks around, according to the horizontal scrape marks on the bumpers .. Apparently they don't think or just don't care that the bucket cutting edge can hit the winch housing underneath the bumper.. o_O

one thing that has always bothered me was the lack of a crossmember at the bottom of the (vertical) side rollers in order to keep the cable up to not snag underneath the side roller casting and bust them clean off.. Did that on one side awhile back on an unavoidable angle pull when the cable slacked and then took back the load during a one man operation .. but then again, anything down low in front to keep the cable up in the pocket would have to be strong enough to carry the load.. Might maybe someday make a bracket that bolts to the bumper to carry an additional idler
 
Last edited:
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website like our supporting vendors. Their ads help keep Steel Soldiers going. Please consider disabling your ad blockers for the site. Thanks!

I've Disabled AdBlock
No Thanks