This is really awesome man! I'm just like you where I mostly do payment stuff but then I do some wilder off-roading to reach some hiking spots. Luckily I haven't needed a winch yet but I could definitely use something like this in the futureHERE'S PART TWO: FINISHING IT UP
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When mounted on a Jeep the bumper is straight across. This picture shows the pieces added to flare the bumper. Notice the "ropey" used to blend in with the welds on the $100 e-bay bumper. I found a beeline paint at HomeDepot which perfectly matched the bumper (Rustoleum truck bed coating)
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The winch I chose is a HyperTough from Walmart...about $175. It is a smaller size made for side-by-Side ATVs. Rated for 5500 pounds. My original purchase was a HyperTough 1000 pound winch which I returned after I mocked it up to the Mav and found that the bumper would have to mount about 6" lower and 6" further out. While the big winch fit the bumper, it didn't fit the truck
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The winch controls mount inside bumpers right side and I drilled holes just above it for the wired remote..
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Last job was wiring the winch. I originally bought cables and fuses and everything else needed to hook to the 12 volt battery under the back seat. After rejecting several possible routes, I discovered that the wires only needed to reach to the engine bay. The hybrid has a post under the hood for hooking up jumper cables. It is in the upper left side of this picture. I wire from this post to a circuit breaker. The circuit breaker stays open when I'm not using the winch, and when I'm 50 miles from nowhere I'm not stranded by a blown fuse - just repair wires and reset the breaker.
I hope this "proof-of-concept " project will inspire someone to build a more polished, genuine, metal truck bumper
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