alpine44
Member
- 403
- 17
- 18
- Location
- Asheville, NC - Elkton, MD
Got the SEE stuck badly in clay yesterday with only 4WD but no Diff-locks and having had a winch would have saved me about an hour of propping the wheels up and filling the ruts with brick rubble. (BTW: In order to get the front wheels raised with the weak loader, the backhoe boom and dipper have to be extended backwards with the outriggers retracted. At that point, I did not want to use the hoe to pull myself out since it would have wrecked the driveway I had just graded).
Mounting any winch, electric or hydraulic, on the front of the SEE is a no-brainer but going forward is not always an option. Yesterday, forward would have been down a cliff. A rear winch would have been the ticket but there is no space in the rear where an externally mounted winch would not interfere with the use of the backhoe. (I have plans for a logging winch that attaches in lieu of the backhoe but that would not help when stuck with the backhoe mounted and the logging winch sitting in storage.)
However, there is plenty of space in the middle of the vehicle, especially after removing the platform with the Jerrycan holder. So, I am thinking to mount a winch there and run the cable out the bushing on the bottom of the rear frame cross-member. (I think that bushing is an alternate mounting point for the pintle hitch).
I plan to fabricate a swiveling pulley that can rotate in the bushing to deal with angles in the pulling direction. Another pulley on the inside of the cross-member would direct the cable between the pipes of the rear sub-frame and get it above the hand brake mechanism. Some hydraulic hoses may have to be re-routed but there seems to be a relatively straight shot the the area behind the cab. There also seems to be enough distance and sideways space for the cable to wind decently on the winch drum. A 10,000lbs Garwood winch from a M35 will fit between the longitudinal plates of the subframe. This winch is originally a PTO winch and would be powered by a hydraulic motor plumbed to the rear hydraulic circuit of the SEE.
Any comments/suggestions/ideas?
Mounting any winch, electric or hydraulic, on the front of the SEE is a no-brainer but going forward is not always an option. Yesterday, forward would have been down a cliff. A rear winch would have been the ticket but there is no space in the rear where an externally mounted winch would not interfere with the use of the backhoe. (I have plans for a logging winch that attaches in lieu of the backhoe but that would not help when stuck with the backhoe mounted and the logging winch sitting in storage.)
However, there is plenty of space in the middle of the vehicle, especially after removing the platform with the Jerrycan holder. So, I am thinking to mount a winch there and run the cable out the bushing on the bottom of the rear frame cross-member. (I think that bushing is an alternate mounting point for the pintle hitch).
I plan to fabricate a swiveling pulley that can rotate in the bushing to deal with angles in the pulling direction. Another pulley on the inside of the cross-member would direct the cable between the pipes of the rear sub-frame and get it above the hand brake mechanism. Some hydraulic hoses may have to be re-routed but there seems to be a relatively straight shot the the area behind the cab. There also seems to be enough distance and sideways space for the cable to wind decently on the winch drum. A 10,000lbs Garwood winch from a M35 will fit between the longitudinal plates of the subframe. This winch is originally a PTO winch and would be powered by a hydraulic motor plumbed to the rear hydraulic circuit of the SEE.
Any comments/suggestions/ideas?
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