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A couple of things that have worked well for me over the years. I keep a selection of 3-4 foot pieces of nylon rope, 1 ton rated. Tie it around whichever point you´ve decided to tow from, and cut the ends ( the knot) when your done. Then you don´t have to mess with knots, and rock hard loops and such. If you figure your gonna need more than a ton, double the rope. Home Depot usually sells heavy rope be the yard, saves freezing your fingers off, and saves your tow strap, on sharp metal peices.
A tow strap, bare, with loops is the safest. If you have to use a chain, nuts, bolts (hardened) and WASHERS, seem to work best.
Make your own hookups, when things go wrong, you got nobody to blame but yourself.
A buddy of mine just bought a new hood for my pick-up. He insisted he make the hookup to his car. When the chain (we needed the extra length) gave way and dented my hood and roof (don´t ask me how it missed the windshield), he asked how expensive is that going to be to fix. I said empty your pockets, he came out with the washers I gave him. I naswered I´ll send you the bill. I think I´m gonna forget the old chain. I´ve got a roll of 5/8" cable in the garage for next time.
I´ve seen alot of guys pull there bumpers off. And rip tow hooks out of the frame. "D" shaped tow hooks, designed to bend, work best.
If you install a hook. don´t forget to put a peice of flat steel behind it (inside the frame), a little longer than the hook base. This really reduces pulling them out by the roots. And holds much better than washers.
I was a recovery specialist in the military, I´ve unstuck a few 50 ton tanks and such.[addsig]