Nice first gen, the beauty of 1st gen's is we almost always had to fabricate our own shit or are too cheap/stubborn to pony up the dough for the fancy stuff.That's exactly how I built the hidden winch mount for my Tacoma, it's not going anywhere and is still technically "bolt-on", but I sleeved and plated the frame.
Those bolt-on winch mounts for the Broncos are so cantilevered out and above the bumper attachment points I can't see how any upward pull would not bend something, especially with a 5K rig that's stuck good. I've had to make dead pulls with the winch point 12' up in a tree pulling at a 45' angle before........
I've always built my winch mounts so the spool was as close to centerline of the frame rails as possible, I realize that's a tall task on the G6's......so we ride with friends with winches and carry a Bubba Rope.
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The majority of my build is custom in one way or another.
When I floated the idea of a Bronco to my wife as the designated "family camp vehicle" her words were "Okay, but it CANNOT become a project like your truck..."That must of bin a fun time. My last jeep was just for daily driving, then light trail riding and somehow wound up caged and at the start line of KOH. When my wife got her bronco 2 months ago, I was looking at it and all she said was NO not gonna happen. A couple weeks later she found a Braptor at a local dealer I was at buying clips and next thing it wound up in my driveway. Ill wait a year or so before I even think about building it.
The RC hidden winch has been my top pick too but yeah the free spool access is a concern. Especially if it is partially submerged in water/ice.So I read through the whole thread and my impression before I started reading is Rough Country is like Harbor Freight of the 4wd world. Don't get me wrong, it has it's place and I have bought products from them. But there is no way for the price that they can research and test like the more expensive companies like Warn, AEV, ARB etc. I'm not saying those companies don't build to a price as well, but they seem to take their time developing products and are probably afraid of getting sued.
Check out this AEV winch bumper on my Bison:
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I know AEV worked with GM to develop it, but Warn worked with Ford to develop theirs.
So my biggest problem is I don't know enough about engineering to look at these kind of products and tell if they are safe and not going to damage my vehicle.
But I want to thank everyone for their input here, I learned a lot and gained a lot of respect for many here and the OP, who is man enough to admit his mistake in public and concerned that he called wolf. Don't worry about it, this is probably the most educational thread in this forum.
I've been thinking about the RC Hidden Winch, and they main things that stopped me was the shitty to no access to the free spool clutch, that and I love the ARB Summit Bumper, but just can't afford it at this time. Either way the LOD brackets look like nice insurance.
It makes me think of this time I had a hard time getting to the free spool and winch plug in a situation on a friends rig.
I'm sorry I don't think I would like any winch that I needed to spool out under power. There is so much more risk in a situation like that IMO for things to go wrong. Spooling out under power generates heat, add that to now load on the winch when you actually need it and you might prematurely overheat it. Typically whenever the winch comes out it's because shit has gone sideways and time is of the essence. I don't want to wait for it to unspool even if it's fast when I can turn the clutch and run a line. Not to mention if your vehicle has lost power for some reason and you need to run an emergency line to hold it in place real quick (give or take a few inches maybe) you can free spool, hook up to something safe and lock it back in. Then if whatever traction you had gives way you at least have an emergency tether out there.Yep, mine had the same appearance. I cleaned up some of the welds and slag on there before I installed my fairlead. What I really don't like is that there's no room for a conventional fairlead in there, only the RC, and it's certainly not the nicest fairlead I've seen. Very abrupt chamfering and none on the backside (though it's not 100% necessary on the back as long as your line is well centered). What I'd like to have is the Yankum grooved fairlead and I toyed with the idea of just getting longer bolts and using the RC fairlead as a spacer so it would fit...but I think that would really put the yankum fairlead in peril and unprotected on the rocks. I'm not super happy with it, but it's still one of the best options currently for a Bronco in my opinion.
It's really not that big of a deal to power spool it out, especially with a wireless controller. The Apex 12K unspools fairly quickly under power, and a lot of hidden winches have to be power spooled out in other vehicles too. Warn makes a winch with a wireless actuator for the clutch, presumably geared toward hidden winch mounts, so if it would fit in the RC tray that would be the ideal setup aside from cost. There are benefits to a hidden winch, such as keeping your winch and line cleaner, less UV damage with synthetic line, better clearance angles in some cases, more protected from trail damage, lower CG and better weight distribution, etc. which can outweigh the negatives of being able to reach the clutch lever depending on how important all that is to you.
Personally, if you're still on the fence, I'd wait and see what Lobo does with their hidden winch setup before making a decision. It looks real promising, especially if combined with a high mount intercooler.
My hope for mine when I get it is to keep the factory MOD bumper a while but go the hidden winch route. Keeps the pull in line with the frame, and I just need to figure out what level of difficulty it will be to grab the clutch handle.
Also even if it was a mistake thank you OP for this thread, I killed a solid time at work reading it and it's been enjoyable to see these discussions when it comes to really putting this truck through it's paces.
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