View Full Version : cheap winchs
HAK
9th July 2007, 12:04 PM
Has any body ever used one of these winchs do they work ok because they are cheap :eek:
http://cgi.ebay.com.au/New-12VOLT-12000LBS-5440KG-Electric-Winch-w-Remote-w12_W0QQitemZ260136386202QQihZ016QQcategoryZ30862Q QrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem
dirtdodger
9th July 2007, 12:39 PM
Ahhhhh.....The Chinese copy of a Warn.
I have fitted a few of these (with various names, depending on who is importing them this week) to family members vehicles and they have worked OK.
With a bit of "pre service" they do the job.
Before use, I would recommend replacing the grease. It's junk.
Check the terminals on all the heavy current leads. They can be loose enough to fall off in the bush. Re crimp or solder them.
Remove the relay box cover and check ALL the heavy current connections for tightness and adequate clearance to prevent a meltdown in the future. The aluminium busbars may need to be trimmed in places to get electrical clearance.
The winch is marginally water resistant.....including the relays.
Remember......You get what you pay for.
The quality control is questionable.
However. If you have the knowhow to do your own quality control/maintenance, go for it.
Would I fit one straight out of the box?...........No way.
Would I fit one to my vehicle?
My winch is a 25 year old Warn that I can buy every part for if required.
HAK
9th July 2007, 12:50 PM
Ahhhhh.....The Chinese copy of a Warn.
I have fitted a few of these (with various names, depending on who is importing them this week) to family members vehicles and they have worked OK.
With a bit of "pre service" they do the job.
Before use, I would recommend replacing the grease. It's junk.
Check the terminals on all the heavy current leads. They can be loose enough to fall off in the bush. Re crimp or solder them.
Remove the relay box cover and check ALL the heavy current connections for tightness and adequate clearance to prevent a meltdown in the future. The aluminium busbars may need to be trimmed in places to get electrical clearance.
The winch is marginally water resistant.....including the relays.
Remember......You get what you pay for.
The quality control is questionable.
However. If you have the knowhow to do your own quality control/maintenance, go for it.
Would I fit one straight out of the box?...........No way.
Would I fit one to my vehicle?
My winch is a 25 year old Warn that I can buy every part for if required.
whats a The aluminium busbars?
dirtdodger
9th July 2007, 12:55 PM
whats a The aluminium busbars?
The heavy current connections between the relays.
An aluminium strip is cheaper than copper strip or cable to make the relay electrical connections
p38arover
9th July 2007, 12:58 PM
If I was buying one of those, I'd buy it from Aldi (my local has a stack of them sitting on pallets). They also are the remote control model. At least when it fails inside the warranty, you will get a warranty on it.
Same price at Aldi.
Ron
HAK
9th July 2007, 01:02 PM
If I was buying one of those, I'd buy it from Aldi (my local has a stack of them sitting on pallets). They also are the remote control model. At least when it fails inside the warranty, you will get a warranty on it.
Same price at Aldi.
Ron
Thats a piont to Im off to buy one not that it can be installed any way
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