Fabio Villalobos
New member
I have a JK Wrangler Sahara 2012, what is the best wincht for it? specifically who many LBS winch?
quite literally "The most expensive you can afford". Some say 1.5 times the weight of your jeep. But that rating rapidly decreases as you reel in cable. your jeep weighs just under 5000 pounds without people or gear, so covering for that at 1.5 times is going to put you at about 8500 pounds, and again you loose more and more capacity for every layer of cable that adds on to your drum as it pulls. So bare minimum would be 95OO just to be safe and even at that it can run into issues, such as pulling out of mud, over obstructions and so on, which is where the saying "the most expensive you can afford" comes in. Next with big winches comes power issues, is your battery big enough? better consider that... And unless you are looking at some real extreme high angle pulls you might want to go REAL expensive, and look at the Mile Marker hydraulic winches, which plumb into your power steering pump these are the beasts that are on the Military Hummers, and are extremely powerful (and expensive) and don't put a big load on your electrical system.
Mile Marker Industries | Winches, Recovery Gear, and Locking Hubs
here is their big civilian non commercial duty winch ( their commercial units are even bigger)
H-18K | Mile Marker Industries
I have a JK Wrangler Sahara 2012, what is the best wincht for it? specifically who many LBS winch?
Your Jeep will weigh in approx 4500 lbs without any extra gear or people. If you round it off at 5000 lbs as a typical weight that you'll be wheeling with and double that you'll need to get a winch that has a 10K capacity. Theres several on the market but Warn is regarded as the industry standard and the Warn Zeon 10 is likely your best choice.
Amazon.com: Warn 89611 ZEON 10-S Winch with Synthetic Rope - 10000 lb. Capacity: Automotive
The deciding factor is how much do you want to spend.
you don't need a 10,000 capable winch! over sell!!! 8000 is even more than you need.. its a proven fact. over many years that the 8000 will pull you out of anything, up a tree, over a cliff.. and if you need more, use the pully.. when you run your winch cable out, through a pulley, back to the jeep, you double it.. so.. depending on your ego, put the 10,000 lb one on, or better yet, put a 20,000 lb one on and show everyone up.. its only money
Running cable from the winch to a winch point, through a snatch block and back to the vehicle does not double a winches pull strength. what i think he is referring to requires multiple snatch blocks to work successfully.
Truth be told, get the largest winch you want. I know ive maxed out 10k lb winches before wanting more. But be aware, most 10k+ winches require different mounting orientations that do not work well with jeep frames or bolt-on mounts.
I personally will never buy a warn winch ever again. I had a m8000 that would not work out of the box. Returned it and spent the money on a 9.5ti. I literally got 11 medium duty pulls out of it and the motor died somehow jamming the planetary gears (or vice versa) leaving the winch dead with 75 feet of cable out. warn insisted that I pull the cable off and pay to return to them. I told the service rep several times that to get the cable off, i would have to pull the planetary housing to free spool the drum to get the cable off. Service rep said that was fine as long as i get the cable off. Did so, paid shipping to send the winch to warn. Almost a month later I get a call from warn saying they won't honor the life time warranty since I took the planetary housing off (broken case seal) which they told me to do.
Bought a used Smitty Built 10k lb winch for $100. 7 years and more pulls than I can count, still working flawless and the 9.5ti is still sitting under my workbench.
For every pulley added increases the line pull by fifty percent, two pulleys would net doubling. Am i wrong?
I probably am, 6th grade physics was over thirty years ago.