wldrbob
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yes canadian 135
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At the risk of repeating myself, I will repeat myself.Okay so I understand the usefulness of a snatch block if you are winching somebody else out, but how do you use it to improve your own pulling power if it is your own winch truck that was stuck?
Is this what has happened to your truck?For example: You are cutting firewood and sink in up to the frame. You have 2 cords of wood on the bed weighing 8000 lbs. Because you are sitting on the frame you have 100% resistance. So a combined weight of 21000 lbs. You have a 10000 lb winch and you have a 200 year old red oak within reach of the front winch to use as an anchor. What do you do?
this is incorrect. go watch a crane with a multiple sheave tackle block - it's the same thing; the tip of the crane boom block is your truck and the tackle block is your snatch block.Now from what I am seeing in the recovery manual running the cable through the snatch block at the tree and back to the truck provides no additional pulling power. The snatch block pulley must move in order multiply the pull weight. ....
We are not talking about multiple sheave tackle. We are talking a single block simple tackle at the tree. Look at page 25 of the Recovery Manual. It has the ratios listed; for simple tackle it lists a 1:1. ratio. The only advantage of attaching a block to the tree and running the cable through it would be to get the cable out far enough in order to maximize the 10000 lb pull weight. i.e. your anchor point is too close to the winch.this is incorrect. go watch a crane with a multiple sheave tackle block - it's the same thing; the tip of the crane boom block is your truck and the tackle block is your snatch block.
b. Running Block. A block that is attached to
the load and moves with the load is classified as a
running block. A running block will always gain
a mechanical advantage, and its sheave functions
as a second-class lever.
For self recovery you will only gain a mechanical advantage if you are using two blocks, one at the anchor and one at the truck.c. Floating Block. A block used with a tow cable
to allow the pull of the cable to aline with the
source of power is known as a floating block. A
floating block provides no mechanical advantage.
It allows the pull to be equally distributed to both tow attachments.
that's not what the info you just posted says - you don't need two blocks to gain a mechanical advantage. you can have a single block and gain a 2:1 pulling advantage....For self recovery you will only gain a mechanical advantage if you are using two blocks, one at the anchor and one at the truck.
Ok, we need some basic physics learning here!Now from what I am seeing in the recovery manual running the cable through the snatch block at the tree and back to the truck provides no additional pulling power. The snatch block pulley must move in order multiply the pull weight.
That actually makes perfect sense to me. At first it looks like a good way to pull the truck in half, but you are gaining slack to the front from between the blocks at they pull closer together.greenjeepster, If you get bored and want to really get a headache ( or learn something) read this thread, http://www.steelsoldiers.com/deuce/33201-more-winching-ops-questions.html.
Question: If the truck is pulling on the tree with a force of 2 x Thing 1, how hard is the tree pulling on the truck?
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