Roel
Member Since: 16 Aug 2008
Location: home
Posts: 1215
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I thought overheating the rope was only an issue when letting somebody down a hill. But will the drum get also very hot when whinching up a hill? I know the motor does. Roel
1997 Camel Trophy Disco ex-P101JWK (traded it for a Britains 42101)
1984 90 TD5
2005 G4 Disco 3 BN55WPT
Also member of club MTR
and Club Faultmate
Interested in my 4x4 history see my website: www.mudmachine.webklik.nl
Sorry it's in Dutch and with google translator it gets funny.
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17th Oct 2008 10:00 am |
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Bodsy
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Member Since: 06 Nov 2006
Location: In the Clubhouse
Posts: 21361
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The drum will get hot winching up or down hill from the heat from the motor generated through pulling or resistant ascent. Bodsys Brake Bible
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17th Oct 2008 10:04 am |
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CFB
Member Since: 02 Dec 2005
Location: Bradford, West Yorkshire
Posts: 6100
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Bodsy wrote:The drum will get hot winching up or down hill from the heat from the motor generated through pulling or resistant ascent.
Main issue from heat is lowering out when the brake acts on the drum itself. The better winches (Superwinch etc) have the brake acting on the gearing and not the drum, this stops the excessive heat build up
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17th Oct 2008 5:48 pm |
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Wex
Member Since: 16 Apr 2007
Location: Knackeragua
Posts: 5173
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sideview wrote:I have thermoplastic (Delrin) fairlead rollers which are designed for synthetic lines
Have you ever had any issues with the line snagging in the roller corners Tammy and does your winch use gear braking or drum braking as CFB mentions above ?
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17th Oct 2008 6:11 pm |
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sideview
Member Since: 02 Dec 2006
Location: in the valley
Posts: 1663
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Haven't had any issues with snagging or anything Wex. All the edges and surface are smooth so that could account for it. My winch has the gearbox braking (superwinch ep9). I'm not so good at giving advice...may I offer you a sarcastic comment instead?
Haiti Earthquake Relief: Donate Your Frequent Flier Miles
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17th Oct 2008 7:38 pm |
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Tim in Scotland
Member Since: 27 Jun 2005
Location: All at sea
Posts: 496
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And you should never use a Plasma rope through a fairlead that has ever had a wire used through it. Wires can cut almost invisible grooves in a fairlead leaving sharp edges that will cut your plasma very quickly.
We use Dynema based ropes on my ship we have designated fairleads for them so there is no chance any towing wire can be used through the same lead for a rope. BTW our Dynema ropes come in at £20k a pop for a 220m length of 40mm rope and we have 10 of those! http://containerinfo.co.ohost.de/vessel_9299927.html
The winches are slightly larger than those on the front of a D3, they are about the same size as a D3! Now a disillusioned new Land Rover buyer and have jumped ship to something less expensive and more reliable that hugs trees.... now driving a Mini Countryman PHEV as well as my trusty and brilliant 1996 Epsom Green Defender90 Tdi300
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17th Oct 2008 7:42 pm |
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simon_arch1
Member Since: 10 Apr 2006
Location: Melbourne Australia
Posts: 502
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Definitely use a hawse fairlead with "plasma" - while you might get away with rollers for a long time, the risk is there to damage the rope...
MTBW.
cheers
Simon D3 - Buckingham Blue, SE, TDV6, 06 model; chipped; underbody armour; Mickey Thompson ATZ 275/65-18 AND MAXXIS Bighorn muddies; rear wheel carrier from 4x4intelligence.com; iPOD aux connection! GME 3200 UHF - aerial mounted on wheel carrier ; LR roof rails/cross bars; Autosafe cargo barrier, Safari Snorkel; Traxide - aux battery; ARB bull bar with Tigerz11 winch; Lightforce 240 XGT driving lights (mitchell bros tow hitch to come)
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24th Oct 2008 1:29 am |
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