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It's worth noting that the military rates winches differently that the commercial market. My Jeep winch is rated 12k, but that means with all of the line unspooled and on the first wrap of the drum where the winch has the most mechanical advantage.I think I am going to config mine into a bumper mount with closed lid. I’ll have a foers setup with a similar in place dummy cable that I can swab through just to keep the main synthetic line clean. And pull it through when I need rear recovery.
Just an independent thought:
I don’t bow down to the school of thought that everything the military did is sacrosanct and brilliant because they have large budgets. In fact government largesse produces waste and all manner of bonehead inefficiency.
Their primary mission is to wage war, not overland in comforts that an aspiring individual might spec for his convenience.
I often wonder why the hydraulic winch is rated at 11k #… seems a tad under spec to me… meh.
Military winches are rated the opposite, with all of the cable on the drum where it has the least amount of mechanical advantage. So the commercial market rates based on the best-case scenario, whereas the military rates on the worst-case.
The military winches also have 3+ times the cable of a retail unit, I suspect this was to allow for compound pulls. An 11k winch with enough cable to do a triple line pull beats a 20k with only enough to do a single. (Plus it'll have faster no-load line speeds)
I wonder what the 2.5 ton 11k and the 5 ton 18k winches are rated on the first layer?