DampLemonade
Member
- 34
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- 18
- Location
- Cannon AFB, New Mexico
Hi all,
Long story short, I'm getting a really good deal one of those Harbor Freight 12k Badland winches (this guy) and I want to be able to use it on my 5-ton. All the documentation only mentions running on 12 volts. I know *technically* those simple electric motors work with a range of voltages, but I don't wanna burn it out and ruin it the first time I use it on the big truck.
Problem #1 is that I don't see any 24v to 12v step-down converters that can handle the current of the winch. It's rated at 6HP @ 12v, which I think is roughly between 500-600 amps @ 12v?
Problem #2 is that I also don't want to wire it directly to one battery and steal the 12v from it, because I've read significant asymmetric loads on batteries in series wears them out faster. I have two NAPA Commercial batteries wired in series, and those suckers were expensive.
Any advice on how I could get this to work? Would running the winch on 24v really be *that* bad?
Long story short, I'm getting a really good deal one of those Harbor Freight 12k Badland winches (this guy) and I want to be able to use it on my 5-ton. All the documentation only mentions running on 12 volts. I know *technically* those simple electric motors work with a range of voltages, but I don't wanna burn it out and ruin it the first time I use it on the big truck.
Problem #1 is that I don't see any 24v to 12v step-down converters that can handle the current of the winch. It's rated at 6HP @ 12v, which I think is roughly between 500-600 amps @ 12v?
Problem #2 is that I also don't want to wire it directly to one battery and steal the 12v from it, because I've read significant asymmetric loads on batteries in series wears them out faster. I have two NAPA Commercial batteries wired in series, and those suckers were expensive.
Any advice on how I could get this to work? Would running the winch on 24v really be *that* bad?