In fairness though an 8274 High Mount isn't really a fair comparison to a "cheap" low mount solution!
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The 9.5XP will keep pulling long after your winch bi*ch has called it a day:) outside of competition use I believe it's the unit to have. For competition use, you can't beat a tweaked 8274, unless of course yours has been out-tweaked by the bloke your competing against!!!
J
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Working that hard on a recovery faded with the last Camel Trophy...:D
Picture the scene... Northern Zambia during the rainy season of 1999. Had to get from A to B or miss my R&R flight (roster in those days were 12 weeks on 2 weeks off, so I wasn't going to miss that flight!)
Hit a bad patch on the main road between Luwingu and Kasama (187km apart), eventually made it after 13 hours and 37 individual 20m plus winch recoveries with my trusty Warn XD9000i...
Nobody is ever going to sell me on the merits of a Tirfor when there is real winching to be done!!!:D:D:D
Cheers,
Lou
An old 8274, $300 or $400. Throw on new drum bushings and seal, $100. welding cable and lugs, maybe another $50. Homemade mount and you will winch all day, be fast and happy. You guys overthink these things. My 40 year old 8274 pulls all day long and always works while running more than fast enough to not **** you off.
You don't "need" a second battery, but they are nice and useful for many other things. A nice voltage sensing relay with solenoid is $65 or so to give reliable and simple battery separation.
A "good" place to spend money is a quality rope and hook.
An old 8274, $300 or $400. Throw on new drum bushings and seal, $100. welding cable and lugs, maybe another $50. Homemade mount and you will winch all day, be fast and happy. You guys overthink these things. My 40 year old 8274 pulls all day long and always works while running more than fast enough to not **** you off.
You don't "need" a second battery, but they are nice and useful for many other things. A nice voltage sensing relay with solenoid is $65 or so to give reliable and simple battery separation.
A "good" place to spend money is a quality rope and hook.
Thanks for the info, mate. I had been looking at a Smittybilt but this might be a better option.
I had one of these winches on a Toyota 75 series Troopy. Best I every did with it was 2 x snach blocks with 3 other vehicles chained to the back of the troop carier, pulling a truck out of a bog south of Canberra. I used to do Telstra work and we had been boring under a creek. The truck was the water truck.
Happy Days.