Winch on M38A1
Hey guys,
I have read for years about the various problems mounting winches on Jeeps. Having to bend the exhaust pipe to make the PTO fit, etc.
It seems to me the problem would be greatly simplified if Warn or Ramsey made a 24V electric winch. Could just buy the winch with no mounting hardward and very easily fabricate a bracket to hold it.
If they don't make a 24V which incidentally I have never seen or heard of, could a motor winding shop rewire the 12V winch and change it to 24V? Just wondering if anyone has any ideas on this, would appreciate hearing from you. I have a 12V winch on my Chevy pickup with a hard wire remote control. Now, Warn is selling winches with wireless remote controls. How cool is that?
Wouldn't it be great to hook up the winch and stand off to the side and operate it with a wireless remote control. Unless of course you needed to be in the Jeep to help the winch along with the Jeep in drive position.
I'm surprised the military hasn't gone to electric winches. They seem so much more simple. Of course any electric winch pulls a lot of amperage and it is advisable to be in the Jeep and rev the motor up to a fast idle to help save the battery.
Just for what it's worth on electric winches, take an 8,ooo pound winch and run out the cable to an anchor, attach a snatch block to the anchor and return the cable back to the front of the Jeep. In so doing, you double the pull to 16,000 pounds of pull and you reduce the consumed amperage BY HALF! Essentially works on the same principle as a block and tackle. The more pulleys you wind on a block and tackle, the easier it is to lift whatever. On the double hookup on a vehicle, try to keep the cable perpendicular to the front of the vehicle. Pulling at an angle with 16,ooo pounds of pull can in some cases BEND YOUR VEHICLE FRAME. Incidentally, this double hookup will double the pulling power of your PTO winch also.
End of lesson. LOL
Now lets hear some feedback.