8N Ren
Gold Member
Just bare this in mind, what ever you use is man made and can fail in a split second. Keep people at a safe distance and don't do anything without thinking about it first. To easy to get sued in your country.
Very, very true. NEVER trust anything and use your head instead of losing it. I have seen HUGE chains break, but that was a Cat D9 pulling out a smaller Deere 6way dozer.Just bare this in mind, what ever you use is man made and can fail in a split second. Keep people at a safe distance and don't do anything without thinking about it first. To easy to get sued in your country.
Been there done that! I bet your truck might have even been 4wd and you were having issues. This winter has been more than others. I always carry 1 hooked 15 foot tow strap for quick smaller jobs and 1 20 foot looped jerk strap. I too needed help this winter due to city traffic driving way too slow.I too am a believer in straps vs. chains. When I was younger there was an abandoned rock quarry where everyone in the area would go "wheelin". I was there with a couple of my friends and it had gotten dark. We came across a truck that was stuck pretty bad. There was a pretty big f-350 trying to pull him out, but he couldn't get traction because he was still in some slick mud. Well I offered my strap to help extend the length so he could get to a dry patch. My strap was pretty old and well used so guess which one broke first? When it broke, it broke pretty tamely. Anyway the driver of the stuck vehicle was pretty much an @ss. He said nothing in regards to thanking me, apologizing, or offering to pay for the strap... all he was doing was complaining that the guy (another stranger) that was trying to pull him out refused to use a chain. He said "if he would use a chain, I would be out by now... my friend is on his was and he will use a chain." Well I figured I had to see this, so I waited around and watched when his friend showed up. He was jerking and tugging like there was no tomorrow. I had turned around to say something to one of my friends when I heard what sounded like a machine gun, it was the chain (yeah the chain that doesn't recoil and falls to the ground) hitting the guys tailgate when it snapped. Lucky nobody was hurt. As far as strap sizes go, I carry a 3" in my 3/4 dodge, a 2" in my suburban, and a smaller one with hooks in my impala. There is a huge difference in straps as far as ply ratings and it's corresponding "load" rating. I buy good straps, and find that a a 2" strap in good condition is plenty most of the time. I think the one I have is rated for 20k and the 3" is rated for 30k. The 3" strap is almost too big and doesn't have enough stretch I don't think, unless I am pulling out a very large vehicle. I think I may get another 2" to keep in the truck. I got my suburban stuck a snow drift in the middle of the road about a month ago, I was close to home luckily but didn't have my truck as it was being borrowed. I went and got my tractor. It is only 2 wheel drive and the road was fairly icy so I had no chance of pulling it out straight. The tractor is probably around 3500lbs and I used the 2" strap and jerked about as hard as I could multiple times since I couldn't drive the suburban and tractor at the same time I just had to do a dead pull. I would get about a 15' start and was probably doing 8 mph or so and would have to brace myself against the steering wheel when the strap tensioned. Took about half a dozen tries but it came out and absolutely no complaint from the strap. This was not exactly a safe thing to do and I am not condoning it, but when it is -15 and you have been out in an open cab tractor for about 3 hours until 4am trying to clear a path down the road just to get the tractor to the vehicle, you will do just about anything.