Rated battery tie downs are mandatory on tour

Moderator: Committee
Sooo many rules!! Hehehehe.
The key dosnt seem logical to what your pushing. An unsafe recovery point is the issue. Regardless if you attach a soft shackle or a bow shackle to shonky recovery point there WILL be a projectile - the recovery point. A soft shackle will not make an average recovery point safe.neofitou wrote: ↑Tue 03 Sep, 2019 2:25 pmI think the key thing that we want to move to soft shackles is the fact that many cars have home made and not rated recovery points or rated recovery points bolted to the car in ways that may be more prone to failure. Some people are better than others at fabricating, and in stressful situations whatever can be done to reduce the chance of big chunks of steel flying through the air the better.Beng wrote: ↑Tue 03 Sep, 2019 1:26 pm Also I came across a YouTube presentation on: "4x4 Soft Shackles vs Bow (Steel) Shackles" and if you are interested you can find it at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kW304fXuG1M
Happy viewing,
Beng
It's just one less thing to worry about flying about the car in a roll over too.
michaelpiranha2000 wrote: The rear is in great condition. but has a broken crown wheel and pinon
gwagensteve wrote: ↑Fri 06 Sep, 2019 6:07 pm You're absolutely correct Nick. A soft shackle won't make an inadequate recovery point safe, but it will likely halve the weight of the bits flying about if it fails.
The (suzuki) points I've seen fail have been of the stock wire loop type and when they fail, the wire fatigues and bends open. The mount doesn't become a projectile but anything that attaches to it will - a good case where a soft shackle increases safety.
We have been caught out numerous times previously with some people's recovery points only accepting an XX size shackle (which nobody has), or being inadequate, not at the right end of the car or in the right spot and various other things. Using a soft shackle provides more flexibility in that in can be used on a tube or crossmember without having a choke a strap or add another item like a sling or tree protector.
If mandating soft shackles makes some people reassess and/or improve their recovery points that's great - everyone wins.
I STILL, after 25 years 4WDing, have absolutely no idea what a "rated" recovery point means. I know full well what a rated shackle, endless sling etc is, because they are rated with a safety factor and have to comply with an Australian Standard.
Recovery points are, by nature, dynamically loaded and loaded in multiple directions. Assessed in that light, the way recovery points are rated is misleading at best. Nobody wants their mount to fail and cause injury or damage but under the right circumstances, ANYTHING can fail. The key is to reduce load on the mount as much as possible. Big car owners seem unable to do this as apparently valve bounce is required to recover any vehicle.
michaelpiranha2000 wrote: The rear is in great condition. but has a broken crown wheel and pinon
No Tour next year. We can't get the t-shirts organised in timeporter.8.luke wrote: ↑Wed 09 Oct, 2019 2:23 pm So has anyone had a think about location for the
2020 AT?