Showing posts with label 16 Road. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 16 Road. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 21, 2018

Winching -- Purchasing, Setting Up

Winching

Purchasing, Setting Up, and Using

By Jerry Smith

Part 1


Winches and winching are something that can be highly technical if you are into some intense 4-wheeling.  Choosing the right winch for your intended use can be easy or difficult.  Money is often the first obstacle you must overcome. 

Money to buy a winch is not always an easy find.  I remember buying my first winch.  Not long after spending a large pile of hard earned cash on my first new Jeep, a 1973 CJ5 with no top to save some initial money and to be able to later buy a new Bestop because I liked the features better than the stock top, I began looking at my options for buying and installing a winch.

I purchased the CJ5 in late October.  Living in western Montana that late in the year, riding around in an open top Jeep could be considered a bit insane.  I quickly determined that a top would be firmly on the top of my “accessory” list.

By mid-December, I had finally saved enough to order a new Bestop from our only 4-wheel drive shop.  When it finally arrived, I found out that the installation instructions had one caveat… install it on a warm, 70-degree plus day.  Those temps were still several months away and the 17-mile drive to work every morning was proving to be brutal.

I found that installing a new Bestop in 30-degree weather to be one great challenge, but it turned out that it could be done.

In 1973, there was no internet.  Information about winches for a Jeep was by word of mouth from mostly inexperienced people.  Just finding a source of winches was difficult, and finding good info on buying a quality winch, what size, and if and what accessories were available was quite a feat.

At the time, I worked as a heavy equipment mechanic for a Caterpillar dealer that sold cable and accessories, so sourcing the accessories was a no-brainer.  Having already installed new Hyster winches on log skidders and Caterpillar equipment gave me some background on the intricacies of that operation. 

When the money was available and the decision of which winch to buy were finally made, I ordered a new Ramsey 8000# electric winch.  That’s when I found that the Jeep was not set up with a platform to simply install the winch.

A friend who had an older CJ5 had a homemade PTO winch on the front.  His father, who owned a truck repair shop, had built the bumper from some old truck frame, which had proven to be substantial, so we copied some of that bumper, and created an integrated winch mount and bumper for the Ramsey.

That Ramsey winch proved to be a most reliable, very useful and often used Jeep accessory.  I could now go places that most of my club members would not follow.

Over the years, we moved many downed trees from trails.  More than once, we removed large rocks from the road and pulled others or me out of what we had gotten ourselves into.  We had pulled fence posts, tightened fences, and all sorts of odd jobs.  That winch proved to be one of the best investments I ever made.

One thing I found about the Ramsey electric winch that always bothered me was how slow it was.  It seemed like watching paint dry as the winch pulled in what seemed like inches of cable.  Rewinding the cable after use was something I came to dread and often just wrapped the cable around the bumper.

When the need for a new winch for a new Jeep came along many years later, knowledge of winching, how to choose a new winch, and the technology in winches had vastly improved.  Options were now available on the Internet that made the choices easier and more difficult. 

I knew what I wanted in a winch, but because the availability of installing a Power-Take-Off (PTO) on the transfer case was no longer an option, I looked for a winch capable of pulling all day if the need came along.  More than once I had the need to pull long distances… like 100+ feet.  Once I winched off a snowy, off-camber shelf road for nearly 1/4–mile.  I also wanted one with a higher speed of recovery if possible.

All those wants pointed the way to a hydraulically driven winch.  The power steering pump could supply the hydraulics, so the source of power already existed.  The heating problem an electrical winch created would be alleviated, and I found a winch with a two-speed retrieval capability.

The Mile Marker hydraulically driven winch was a military proven winch.  Being a military vet, I knew that the military can tear apart an anvil barehanded, so if the winch could stand up to them, I had little to worry about.  Over a ten-year period of fairly intense use, I can honestly say that I have zero complaints with the Mile Marker winch.

(Well… maybe one.  Remembering which lever belongs in which direction for high and low speed can be a long learning process.)

Over the years, I have found that there are some little things you can do to improve the operation of your electric winch.  Electrical winches are a heat-building machine.  Heat and electrical energy are the greatest of enemies.  As the temperature rises, the demand for more power is increased.  That demand causes the temperature to rise even more… and the process continues until something fails.  This is NOT a good system.

Many of the newer winches have sensors that will shut the winch down when the temperatures reach critical numbers.  Once that happens, you must wait until the winch cools down to continue.

There are two things you can do to help this problem. 

The first is to take the cables that come with a new winch and throw them away or recycle them.  Those are just extended battery cables to be able to reach from the battery to the winch.  The average battery cable is a stranded heavy copper wire with a non-conductive coating.

Battery cable is made for short, heavy electrical loads… such as starting an engine.  If you hold a battery cable in your bare hand under load, you can feel it building heat.  As it heats up, less amperage can flow through the wire.  This causes it to heat even more, which reduces the amperage the starting motor (or winch motor) is demanding.  In the case of the winch, heat reduces the pulling power, the opposite of what you want from a winch.

The easy fix for this problem is to replace the heavy battery cable with a length of welding cable.  Think about it this way… welding is a long-term heat process.  You are literally melting metal to join two surfaces together.  That welding cable is made to carry high amperage for long durations.  If you winch for any distance, your winch needs all the power that battery can supply.  Why not supply the maximum amperage while reducing the heat build up??

The next possible way to enhance the use of an electric winch is to shorten the length of steel cable or synthetic rope on the drum.  A shorter rope requires fewer layers of rope on the drum.  Fewer layers actually increase the pulling power of your winch. 

The majority of pulls with a vehicle winch are of short distances.  Sometimes, just a few inches or feet will get you back underway.  Most of the time, the anchor you pull from is not all that far away from the winch.  All that extra rope is dead weight and of little value.

For those instances where you need a longer winch line, carry a length of rope as an extension.  Learn how to use the extension to the length you need without tying it in permanent knots.  You can carry as much extension rope as you feel comfortable with or can afford.

Your battery and charging system will love you if you do both.  They will not need to produce as much energy to do the same job.

Your winch will love you also.  It will not heat nearly as much because it will be operating at a lower rate of pull. 

In part two of this series, we’ll talk about how to choose the right winch for your rig.


Friday, November 1, 2013

Truck or Treat and 16 Road to 21 Road




Truck or Treat and 16 Road to 21 Road

By Jerry Smith

October 26, 2013

No, you read it right.  “Truck or Treat” is an annual event put on in Fruita, CO where trucks, cranes, emergency vehicles, and tractors are the featured items that families (primarily the kids) come to see and “experience”.

No fun could be found in "Driving a Jeep"

What kid wouldn’t want to climb into the driver seat and pull the cord on an air horn in a class 8 truck? 

"Tooting" an air horn

Or they can go into the back of an ambulance, sit in the backseat of a police car, play in a cattle hauler trailer -- (no Bull Shtuff) or see one of the airport fire trucks up close.

Two "Desperadoes

Truck cranes with their booms up, a Grand Valley Power “bucket truck” showing the heights they may go to, and City of Fruita trucks were all on display.  Even school busses could be gone through.

"Little Farmers" 

Add some Halloween candy and how can you go wrong if you are young?

Well, this year the Grand Mesa Jeep Club, Colorado’s 2013 “Jeep Club of the Year”, took over nearly one city block displaying Jeeps and buggies and offering the kids candy as well.  It was an awesome sight.

The Grand Mesa Jeep Club at "Truck or Treat"

Kids, candy, and 4-wheelers 

16 Road to Upper 21 Road

With all the excitement of the Truck or Treat, one would think that would conclude the Saturday festivities… but that would be wrong. The 2013 Colorado “Club of the Year” hates to waste a good opportunity to go into the great American BackCountry.

A short trip into the Bookcliffs north of Grand Junction had been planned.

The Bookcliffs are a land of strange looking desert mountains topped with cliffs that resemble a shelf of books from a distance.  Nearly 200-miles long, the Bookcliffs begin in the northern De Beque Canyon and run through the Grand Valley following the I-70 corridor west to Green River, Utah where they turn north to Price, Utah.

Several dark canyons cut through the face of the Bookcliffs, some with large “bowl” watersheds hidden from view.  These “bowls” are homes to several species of wildlife including; mountain lions, bears, bobcats, coyotes, mule deer, pronghorn antelope, wild horses, bighorn sheep, and bison.

Three of "Red Jeeps" in Coal Gulch

Mainly due to the existence of great quantities of fossil fuels like coal and natural gas, many roads enter into these canyons and up on the ridges providing great exploration of the area in a Jeep or other 4x4.

Taking 16 Road north will eventually bring you into the Big Salt Wash as it exits the BookCliffs.  Further up the wash the road forks, and as you who are familiar with this writers’ practices, “when you come to a fork in the road, Take It!

“Right turn Clyde.”  

Soon we were skirting the end of the ridge that is the front of the BookCliffs and entered Coal Gulch that is directly behind this ridge. 

About halfway along the canyon road, Aaron’s YJ developed fuel delivery problems.  As tail gunner, I stopped to see if there was anything we could do to get them up and running. 

After a bit, he got it to run just well enough to turn around and head for town.  We would later hear that they were still running, though weakly, as Zane and Dale passed them on their way to catch-up to the group.

The road winds along the bottom of the gulch for miles before offering another fork in the road.

Technically, this fork is the beginning of a loop that starts and ends here, but we took the steeper road up onto Ross Ridge.  Several gas wells and their facilities dot the area with pads and short spur roads to each of them.

Sometimes we shift into "2-foot drive"

Following one such road, we came near the southern end of Ross Ridge overlooking Hunter Canyon… better known as 21 Road to our group.

21 Road is a nationally known “extreme trail” that draws people from all over the country to Grand Junction to try their buggies and driving skills. 

21 Road has a reputation for having flash floods that literally alter the trail from time to time.  This potentially makes it an unknown and different challenge every time you run it.  Nearly from the mouth of Hunter Canyon you are presented with one obstacle after another that will challenge you and your rig.

21 Road is known for many “rescue runs” to either bring needed parts to do trail repairs or for bringing a broken rig out by strap(s). 

People try to do this trail in stock or near stock Jeep Rubicons.  Many make the trip in and back out with big smiles and great pride… until they find bent axles, twisted frames, and “rock rash” were the ultimate outcomes.  Sometimes, the “automatic reject feature” of a trail is slow to materialize.

Three of these Rubicons that we know of were replaced not long after their experience on 21 Road.  The cost of repairing them was much too high to justify.

Most of our group hiked up to the overlook on the point of Ross Ridge where you look out over the Grand Valley.  Unfortunately, the air quality was rather poor spoiling the view.

Returning from a hike on Ross Ridge 

After turning around 14-rigs, we followed the road that drops you down into the upper end of Hunter Canyon up stream of the most challenging extreme obstacles. 

The steep road presents very sharp hairpin turns that were fairly challenging and fun.  Two of the hairpins were tight enough that even CJ7s had to back-up for a second attempt to make the turn.  Many fear turns like these while others approach them as just another “bump in the road”.

Sharp "Hair-pin" turns have you meeting those ahead of you. 

Not far from reaching the canyon bottom we found a long, wide, and flat spot that made for a good “Kodak Moment”.  Even with an extreme wide-angle lens, we had too many rigs parked side-by-side to get all in the one shot and not run the far end into oblivion. 

The Grand Mesa Jeep Club in Hunter Canyon (21 Road) 

From this parking area, most of the group walked to the overlook of the extreme obstacles down stream.  This view is quite awesome with no buggies in sight.  With one or more buggies in these boulders, it is hard to understand how they do what they do.

GMJC members looking at the upper extreme obstacles of 21 Road

Along the way back to the parking area, some were walking up the wash bottom when we encountered lion tracks.  These appeared to be from a medium size cat and became the discussion point for a while.

Sighting bear tracks in this canyon is fairly common.  Most of the Hunter Canyon area is quite steep and animals will use the road in the bottom as they move through.

Exiting the backcountry, it was decided that many of us would meet at “Munchies” in Fruita for dinner. 

Picturesque and steep canyon walls of Hunter Canyon

Not long thereafter, several of us were enjoying some good food and even better camaraderie.  It’s no wonder that the Grand Mesa Jeep Club is also the Colorado 2013 “Club of the Year”.

This turned into a really good day of Jeeping and showing community support.

And of course one last thought to ponder;  “When you come to a fork in the road… Take it!!

Happy Trails.


Copyright Happy Trails 2013.  All rights reserved.