I have a Ramsey 9k quick mount winch. I have had it almost ten years now. I did have to put a few new solenoids in it last year. The solenoids were the same part from a Warn winch. This winch is very handy to have and I have used it on several different things. I use it on my trail rig (Suzuki Samurai) and have used it on my last three trucks. I have used it to pull out my 01 Dodge 2500. I keep straps, d-rings and a snatch block in the truck. I also used this winch on my last car trailer, but have not made a mount for my newest trailer yet. JC
A further point of contention here. RollTideRam has a quality winch that has served him well. A 9K winch will move mountains if properly rigged. For a Multimount setup it's critical that you have a good method to transfer your donor battery power to the winch. A cheap set of jumper cables won't do that.
The best method is a good electrical connection on each vehicle that plugs the winch directly into the battery with heavy wire and quality connections. But that's very expensive, especially if you want the versatility that RollTideRam needs.
The next best method is a heavy wired, lead fastened permanently to the winch with enough cable to reach the battery of the donor vehicle with high quality, strong clamps. Worst part of this is that on some modern vehicles you can't see the battery let alone get a good clamp on a post.
The most used method and poorest is to simply clamp jumper cables on the winch and on the donor battery.
The issue is that his 9K Ramsey probably has a 450 amp draw at it's strongest pull. Very, very few jumper cables will allow that much current to pass thru. For example, if your vehicle had a 450 amp alternator how big would the alternator output cable have to be???
So if you use a multimount you must build a quality cable setup to transfer a possible 450 amp draw from your battery to the winch. Otherwise your 9K winch may become something as small as a 2K winch. The capacity of the winch is directly related to the amperage input.
In a quality setup the winch cost is minimized by the additional installation and support costs. Heavy cables, dual batteries, high output alternator, snatch blocks, tree savers, etc., etc. If I spend my money wisely on the setup and then fasten a cheap winch to it I blew a lot of good money and I'll smoke the cheap winch.
Sorry for the ramble this time....
