It is a well known topic to never use the towball for a snatch recovery, but, a snatch recovery doesnt always mean a twenty meter run up. Just a gentle forward move should be sufficient. If a snatch strap was not to be used, just a normal recovery strap with no kinetic energy, would not the forces be the same as if a hitch were used?
NEVER use a tow ball for any recovery using any method, EVER.
A non stretch strap is harsher than one that stretches, but a stretchy snatch strap can provide any force from mild to extreme depending on how it is used.
Used with knowledge, training and care a snatch strap is a very useful tool.
It can be put into the hitch itself and secured with the hitch pin, with care.
Cheers,
Peter
There are plenty of other option , as Peter said remove the tongue and use the hitch pin BUT never never never use the towball , as a matter of fact I don't believe towballs should be used for anything above a garden trailer .
People who flat tow use the towball, a lot of jerky motion happens there.
The coupling fit on the tow ball may be a bit slack. However, the force on the ball by the rattle will be very fare less than the shock from a tow rope or snatch strap becoming tight when you race forward and take up the slack.
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PeterD Nissan Navara D23 diesel auto, Spaceland pop-top Retired radio and electronics technician. NSW Central Coast.
It is a well known topic to never use the towball for a snatch recovery, but, a snatch recovery doesnt always mean a twenty meter run up. Just a gentle forward move should be sufficient. If a snatch strap was not to be used, just a normal recovery strap with no kinetic energy, would not the forces be the same as if a hitch were used?
Gentle forward move. Not talking about the mad run up.
People who flat tow use the towball, a lot of jerky motion happens there.
Yes, agree. Should be ok IMO subject to careful/mild use. If you snatch like you see some gooses do on YouTube the ball would most certainly be getting over loaded. They are rated 3t to tow, not yank on it with 3t or more.
However, seems to me the tow pin would be a better option.
Best option is don't get bogged. That's why I got a 4x4. Lol
I don't think many tow balls are fixed at the correct tension.
Just as tight as can be achieved with the biggest shifter or stillsons.
The WDH I bought stipulates the torque for all the nuts including the tow ball.
I don't think many tow balls are fixed at the correct tension. Just as tight as can be achieved with the biggest shifter or stillsons. The WDH I bought stipulates the torque for all the nuts including the tow ball.
That's right Dennis, and this can be the result. Cheers
Both pictures confirm that it is the shank of the towball that has failed.
Now, what could cause a large threaded shank to break like that, shear forces on a stretched piece of metal?
I suppose (is there a mechanical engineer in the house?) that a tow ball and caravan are, essentially, moving at the same speed and it is only when the caravan lags the car by the play in the hitch that a shock load occurs? This lag distance will be, say, 5mm so the difference in speed (inertia?) of the van/car will be minimal - it is not as though the car doing, say, 30kph suddenly has a caravan hooked on its towball.
Personally I don't like towballs as a hitch mechanism and I don't like snatch straps and given how easy it is to use the pin rather than the towball I'd always go that way - a towball is 500gm of solid shot heading your way fast!
I don't mind risk taking but why do it if you don't have to?
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"I beseech you in the bowels of Christ think it possible you may be mistaken"
Oliver Cromwell, 3rd August 1650 - in a letter to the General Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland
I suppose (is there a mechanical engineer in the house?) that a tow ball and caravan are, essentially, moving at the same speed and it is only when the caravan lags the car by the play in the hitch that a shock load occurs? This lag distance will be, say, 5mm so the difference in speed (inertia?) of the van/car will be minimal - it is not as though the car doing, say, 30kph suddenly has a caravan hooked on its towball.
Personally I don't like towballs as a hitch mechanism and I don't like snatch straps and given how easy it is to use the pin rather than the towball I'd always go that way - a towball is 500gm of solid shot heading your way fast!
I don't mind risk taking but why do it if you don't have to?
The next person to suffer grievous harm as a result of a tow ball failing while being used as a recovery point ,will not be the first or last
The lateral (forward and back) load rating required for the tow bar is 2 x its tow rating. The towball requirement is probably similar, but they do break when used for recovery.
Cheers,
Peter
The lateral (forward and back) load rating required for the tow bar is 2 x its tow rating. The towball requirement is probably similar, but they do break when used for recovery. Cheers, Peter
I suppose (is there a mechanical engineer in the house?) that a tow ball and caravan are, essentially, moving at the same speed and it is only when the caravan lags the car by the play in the hitch that a shock load occurs? This lag distance will be, say, 5mm so the difference in speed (inertia?) of the van/car will be minimal - it is not as though the car doing, say, 30kph suddenly has a caravan hooked on its towball.
Personally I don't like towballs as a hitch mechanism and I don't like snatch straps and given how easy it is to use the pin rather than the towball I'd always go that way - a towball is 500gm of solid shot heading your way fast!
I don't mind risk taking but why do it if you don't have to?
All the rivets in the Commet jet planes were moving at the same speed as the rest of the plane and yet they failed.
Pure and simple metal fatigue was the culprit. Same with tow ball shanks. Tighten the nut too much and all those small shocks from potholes and corrugations advance the metal fatigue
I don't think many tow balls are fixed at the correct tension. Just as tight as can be achieved with the biggest shifter or stillsons. The WDH I bought stipulates the torque for all the nuts including the tow ball.
That's right Dennis, and this can be the result. Cheers
Here we have what I believe is the best hitch of all, a DO35, and it is clear that this example has had some very strong forces applied. Didn't break though. Cheers
A friend used the pin from his tow ball goose neck to to a straight short tow out of a bog hole. In total moving the towed vehicle only 2 metres, no jerking etc. just a straight slow steady pull.
The result was a bent pin, which then meant he could not easily remove it an refit his goose neck and then tow is camper trailer from the Vic high country.
Long story short, day trip into Bainsdale, new pin, old one cut out (a reciprocating hacksaw I believe was used) and then back into camp.
I suggest simply spend some dollars and buy the proper recovery eye to fit into the towbar, a quality rated shackle and be done with it, and include a spare pin in your kit.
"A further 1826 simulated cycles were completed before fatigue failure of the pressure cabin from a crack growing from a rivet hole at the forward port escape hatch"
I use a a number 8 around tow bar when using strap or rope . I would never use the ball on its own !! ( can become a sling shot ) I think we have inferior imports these days . No one is really checking quality !! We have used this method to pull transmission / power cables through valleys etc .
When you look at a ball it looks very strong, but just not designed to take that amount of force/stress. Also the metallurgical strength of the material would be a factor including fatigue.
I wonder if you removed the ball and used the hole on the tongue if it would be ok with a decent shackle??