- Location
- Grand Junction, CO
I'm betting that 98% of RME members know and understand why it's dangerous to use Tow Balls as a recovery point. This discussion is for the 2% that may not realize how much damage a tow ball can do when it breaks during recovery. Most common tow balls are rated for thousands of pounds of load carrying/pulling capacity when used properly, but that is a static load, not a dynamic, yanking-as-hard-as-possible pull.
Ronny Dahl recently made a great video that shows what kind of damage a breaking & flying tow ball can do to vehicles and people standing near by when the tow ball becomes a 5# projectile.
IMO, the best recovery point is an engineered one that is attached directly to the frame. Using the tow hitch can be an option, if done right but you need to be aware of how many pounds receiver hitch is rated for (its Class) and how strong it really is before tugging on it. On my JK, the reciever hitch is very light weight... I have used it for light tugs before, but my bumper/frame mounted points are much stronger. I carry a Warn receiver mount with a shackle, but have heard that a standard hitch pin isn't built for the forces that come with a hard-tugging recovery. Using a strap with the hitch pin thru the loop has been done many times, but IMO it's a last resort option. You really need to use common sense with a strap and hitch pin, side loading can possibly tear the strap, bending & breaking the pin is possibly if yanked on hard enough.
Ronny Dahl recently made a great video that shows what kind of damage a breaking & flying tow ball can do to vehicles and people standing near by when the tow ball becomes a 5# projectile.
IMO, the best recovery point is an engineered one that is attached directly to the frame. Using the tow hitch can be an option, if done right but you need to be aware of how many pounds receiver hitch is rated for (its Class) and how strong it really is before tugging on it. On my JK, the reciever hitch is very light weight... I have used it for light tugs before, but my bumper/frame mounted points are much stronger. I carry a Warn receiver mount with a shackle, but have heard that a standard hitch pin isn't built for the forces that come with a hard-tugging recovery. Using a strap with the hitch pin thru the loop has been done many times, but IMO it's a last resort option. You really need to use common sense with a strap and hitch pin, side loading can possibly tear the strap, bending & breaking the pin is possibly if yanked on hard enough.