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I was holding it on my service brakes, on that sort of surface I'm applying about 3 tonnes of tractive effort. On dry tarmac like in the picture I was getting just over 3 tonnes of resistance, on semi-dry tamped concrete I was getting 2.988 tonnes of resistance, on damp grass held on the brakes I'm applying approx 2.4 tonnes which drops to 1.6 tonnes the moment you let the wheels drive/spin, the more they spin the more it drops right down to sub 1 tonne. This experiment was carried out with calibrated crane scales.Don’t do it in reverse! Because of the shape of the teeth on the gears in the diffs they are much stronger going forwards..
But yes well done!
When I first saw the picture I assumed you were reversing. I hadn’t noticed the winch rope..I was holding it on my service brakes, on that sort of surface I'm applying about 3 tonnes of tractive effort. On dry tarmac like in the picture I was getting just over 3 tonnes of resistance, on semi-dry tamped concrete I was getting 2.988 tonnes of resistance, on damp grass held on the brakes I'm applying approx 2.4 tonnes which drops to 1.6 tonnes the moment you let the wheels drive/spin, the more they spin the more it drops right down to sub 1 tonne. This experiment was carried out with calibrated crane scales.