Is my winch rope still okay to use?

Palmy

Member
Joined
Oct 24, 2021
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27
Location
New Zealand
Hi everybody,

I used my Warn winch for the first time, but I completely forgot to install the fairlead onto my bumper. Is this ok to still use? Or do I need to buy another...

Thanks!


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As stated above, that section of rope minimally needs to be cut out…
 
@Palmy , Don't be scared to cut and splice, do it once and it's super easy. There's a few videos on here or youtube. Tool you want is called a FID. Factor 55 makes a tool that cuts time significantly but its pricey for what it is. I used a buddies and ended up buying myself one
 
@Palmy , Don't be scared to cut and splice, do it once and it's super easy. There's a few videos on here or youtube. Tool you want is called a FID. Factor 55 makes a tool that cuts time significantly but its pricey for what it is. I used a buddies and ended up buying myself one

Sharpie makes a good tool, as well.
 
Cut that section off and attach the rest of the good rope back to the winch drum. I wouldn't attempt to splice the line back together unless you really, really know what you're doing.
 
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If that section is near the end, cut it off and live with a slightly shorter rope.

There's no way I would trust that section for recovery.

Did it rub against the bumper cutout for a fairlead?
 
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He is probably either dead from his line breaking and dropping his rig on him or his radioactive spider has managed to knit him up a new line by now.

Hey, it was only a bit over a year ago (wish I'd seen that before I replied :unsure: )

That synthetic line lasts a long time and winch line technology has probably evolved in that time frame. 😁
 
I need to install the thimble I got from Wizard Recovery on my Superwhinch S 9500 SR. What size FID do I need? Since I will be using this tool once in a blue moon will a plastic one be acceptable?
 
@mrblaine, I’d like a good fid. All I have is a plastic one that is tedious to use. Is this a good one?

https://www.knotandrope.com/collect...ucts/yale-tubular-fids?variant=21734444400688

No idea. I operate under the premise that this shit is basic, needs to be able to be done in the field with minimal tools, and a bit of knowledge is far more important than anything you can buy. The ONLY caveat to that is perhaps a small pair of "dyneema" specific scissors to make that a bit easier. I do all of my splicing with one of those tedious plastic fids and a roll of cheap electrical tape.

The only thing I ever do is buff the sharp edges off of the point on my jeans so it doesn't snag the individual fibers.