Knotbored said:Several times I thought I was stuck pretty good but found my Kabota has a pedal that locks the rearend down on the floor behind the clutch. Its amazing to this amature how my lil tractor can suck itself out of mud with all wheels engaged and that pedal down.
Has anyone considered mounting a small wheel outside a rear wheel, winding a cable to that and using wheel power to tow a tractor out?-Not permanent, just bolted onto the rear tire bolt pattern if/when you are stuck?
bucmeister said:I seriously doubt many trucks have an alternator that puts out more than what the winch draws under load. Most vehicle alternators likely fall in the 60-120 amp range and a 12 K winch would likely draw double that when under a hard pull. So why doesn't every truck with a winch have repeat altenator failures almost every time the winch is used?
MarEng said:The secret (learned the hard way) is to recognize you're stuck early, before the mud is over the axles and abandon the load in the FEL or on the 3-pt and start extracting yourself.
chucko said:If I had a winch with 120 foot of cable I would get stuck 121' from the nearest tree
bucmeister said:I seriously doubt many trucks have an alternator that puts out more than what the winch draws under load. Most vehicle alternators likely fall in the 60-120 amp range and a 12 K winch would likely draw double that when under a hard pull. So why doesn't every truck with a winch have repeat altenator failures almost every time the winch is used?
MarcusCarr said:I would skip the winch all together.
grab a 6" dia or so log that is about 2 feet longer than the diameter of your rear tire, put the log beside the tire at axle height with 12" past each side of the tire, run a chain through the wheel and around the log. Put the tractor in low reverse and you can drive out of anything. The tire turns, tightens the chain on the log, turns the log and acts as a stilt.
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