Harbor Freight Is Going To Hate This Video

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  • čas přidán 2. 08. 2021
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Komentáře • 2,6K

  • @Ratheon1075
    @Ratheon1075 Před 2 lety +1754

    For someone so familiar with winches you missed some key pieces of information. For the winch to twist there had to be flex in the mounting plate on the bumper. I know of no recovery winch including Warn that can survive flex in the mounting plate. Didn't you fry a Warn in the same video? You were trying to pull an Aspen stump which you admitted to being unfamiliar with. Anchored a 9,000lb truck with a tractor which together exceeds the load ratings of both winches you broke. For all intents and purposes you connected two immovable objects to each end and pushed both winches to failure. Difference between the two was the Harbor Frieght was strong enough to find the weak point in that bumper causing it to flex. It doesn't take much flex to snap those die cast covers. Sorry but this looks more like a user error/too weak of a mount issue rather than a winch failure to me.

    • @Sidekick_Snowman
      @Sidekick_Snowman Před 2 lety +124

      Good point. Here's a comment to boost visibility.

    • @mikebravo6854
      @mikebravo6854 Před 2 lety +64

      Agreed

    • @davereeves1967
      @davereeves1967 Před 2 lety +101

      You did an excellent job of getting to the root of the problem here.

    • @weekendwarrior2959
      @weekendwarrior2959 Před 2 lety +32

      You make some excellent points. For future reference though, the term is "for all intents and purposes".

    • @HandyMike78
      @HandyMike78 Před 2 lety +6

      I agree Matthew

  • @Fred.jpeg_
    @Fred.jpeg_ Před 2 lety +426

    Theres a reason we can use trees as anchor points to help us winch out of a ditch.
    It's the same reason both winches failed in the last video. Just my 2 cents.

    • @RogueShadowTCN
      @RogueShadowTCN Před 2 lety +10

      Failing to pull it out would have been fine, it's the breaking and nearly catching fire part that's the problem.

    • @DaroriDerEinzige
      @DaroriDerEinzige Před 2 lety +20

      @@RogueShadowTCN ... Yeah, but to be honest - 1/3 the Price, you've a hard plastic Case ... At some point you've to think for yourself.
      I was like "Wtf?" when he simple tried to completly pull out the tree stomp without anything of preperation from a dry and obviously dense ground. That was basically set to fail.

    • @StevenAndrews
      @StevenAndrews Před 2 lety +25

      @@RogueShadowTCN massively overloaded isn’t the winch’s fault

    • @RogueShadowTCN
      @RogueShadowTCN Před 2 lety +3

      @@StevenAndrews it isn't being ripped on for not being able to pull enough. Fire is not an acceptable failure mode. The motor should stop spinning first, the housing wasn't strong enough for the motor. That's a design problem.

    • @RealitySurvival
      @RealitySurvival Před 2 lety

      Also an excellent point.

  • @didxogns1
    @didxogns1 Před rokem +334

    This is probably the best advertisement for harbor freight. It performed so well that he had to abuse it beyond absurdity to prove his bias

    • @Riverdale__Murrrland
      @Riverdale__Murrrland Před rokem +23

      Exactly, he’s a 🤡
      He didn’t have it mounted properly and it when the mounting twisted the winch twisted. He didn’t explain anything and he’s very arrogant!

    • @trekster9269
      @trekster9269 Před rokem +1

      How much did they pay you?

    • @dontump2286
      @dontump2286 Před rokem +7

      Exactly, he just didnt get paid what he expected from Harbor Freight so he bashed them and glazed over the part where his mounting bolt broke which caused the housing to break. His arrogance showed in the end when he said, "What do I know, I'm just a multi million dollar corporation." You know how to manipulate the truth to support your personal narrative on internet videos. That's what you know. Very biased and un ethical to not show pictures and videos of your mount breaking then you purposing abusing the winch just because harbor freight didnt pay you what you wanted.

    • @lopez907
      @lopez907 Před 8 měsíci

      Definitivamente es que yo me comprare para mi pequeño pik up

  • @JasonNutty
    @JasonNutty Před 2 lety +408

    First off I have been in felling trees and removing stumps for over 30 years. Being that he was been with the forestry service, you would think he would know the dynamics of a stump. Look at the size of the stump. The root system is substantial. To think any normal winch would pull that out, even with a snatch block, is absolutely insane. Yes the winch failed, but the true failure here was Wranglestar. The misuse and abuse of this winch is the true failure. There are so many who use these winches with out a failure like this. He purposefully put that winch in a position to fail. To say he isn't hating on Harbor Freight is a joke, that's all I hear. Listen to his words, he is prejudice against HF from the get go, even tho he wants his viewers to think otherwise. I have read the comments and I want to see a him put one of his Warn winch's on that stump and do a continuous pull till it dies.

    • @thewfc11
      @thewfc11 Před 2 lety +36

      I own a landscape company and begin my career removing stumps and root systems. You are completely correct.

    • @rickmcdonald1557
      @rickmcdonald1557 Před 2 lety +31

      Yes Jason you are right on the money with this and for someone who professes to know everything he is sorely lacking in common sense. Abusing equipment is the sign of a person with low IQ~!! He got the damn winch for Free and then cusses it like he used rent money to buy it~! 💩💩💩

    • @jonathanchase2821
      @jonathanchase2821 Před 2 lety +8

      Completely agree.

    • @rickmcdonald1557
      @rickmcdonald1557 Před rokem

      You are so right about this dude and I quit watching him years ago due to his inflated ego and negativity. Harbor Freight gives this creep a "Free" winch and then he abuses it to the max and when it fails he cusses it~! Karma is warming up for this guy and pay backs are a real Bitch~!!

    • @AmixLiark
      @AmixLiark Před rokem +8

      I would agree BUT he has an example of a product that works well even if it isn't being used as intended: Warn winches. Warn has never failed him in this way and he's been using them HIS WHOLE LIFE. Harbor Freight specifically offered this product as an economically viable replacement for the Warn. It did not replace the Warn so clearly the Warn is the more quality and most versatile product. Admittedly, it would have assisted his point if he actually showed the Warn pull out the stump after the HF failed... so there is a valid argument that he's just shilling for WARN because he never corroborated his claims about WARN but assuming his claims are true then the HF is an inferior product and his gripes about it are legitimate because the WARN and the HF were made for the exact same purpose and yet the WARN, even though it isn't made for pulling stumps, does so successfully.

  • @BaileyFoxFilm
    @BaileyFoxFilm Před 2 lety +2148

    In the name of transparency, I think we need to see a video of a warn pulling out an aspen stump. Bashing an affordable option because it didn't pull three times the max weight seems to have struck your ego. When the warn shuts off to prevent the same thing from happening, I'll take your side.

    • @Sidekick_Snowman
      @Sidekick_Snowman Před 2 lety +131

      I agree completely

    • @TheCatanzaroShop
      @TheCatanzaroShop Před 2 lety +66

      I agree as well.

    • @thrifty1783
      @thrifty1783 Před 2 lety +56

      Agreed

    • @matthewhall435
      @matthewhall435 Před 2 lety +49

      Yes was coming here to say we now need to we a warm not self destruct pulling it out !

    • @dhovat
      @dhovat Před 2 lety +68

      If I remember correctly he started with his warn and it shut down... maybe I am remembering wrong?

  • @nathanp5507
    @nathanp5507 Před 2 lety +115

    No winch this size will remove an aspen stump..and typically people who use this type of equipment have the common sense to know that

    • @jaytrock3217
      @jaytrock3217 Před 2 lety +14

      For someone that knows a lot about Forestry blows my mind he doesn't know about Aspens root structure..

    • @P_steez
      @P_steez Před 2 lety +3

      And didnt bother to dig it out at all??

  • @AllKidsOutNow
    @AllKidsOutNow Před 2 lety +73

    "I'm not and engineer." The only fact in this entire video.

  • @KingClown283
    @KingClown283 Před 2 lety +78

    Give me a break. This isn't the winches fault this is an installation fault. You pushed things far passed design limits. Your bumper flexed and put loads on the winch in ways it's not meant to be loaded. Your video quality has took a drastic dive.

    • @dmennenoh
      @dmennenoh Před rokem +3

      This is just plain and simple user error.

  • @darkwater482
    @darkwater482 Před 2 lety +227

    What does “Manly Manners” have to say about a man who refuses to accept responsibility when he’s wrong? Clearly both winches were abused to the point of failure in a task neither could, or was meant to accomplish.

    • @user-nh3gu1ge3d
      @user-nh3gu1ge3d Před 2 lety +1

      Your comment would first need to demonstrate that he's wrong before you extrapolate on what he should do when he is. You seem to have skipped over that step, but that's the most critical one. It seems to me that his point is: if the task was too much, then the winch should have just cut off (like the warn presumably does?) instead of self destructing? That seems like a very fair point to me, but I know little about winches. It's a bit off color to insult his character based on him not doing something when he's wrong, when he's not even wrong (or at the very least you haven't shown him to be). -1 to you, sir.

    • @darkwater482
      @darkwater482 Před 2 lety +11

      @@user-nh3gu1ge3d He knows it even if you don’t. The title of the original video was “This was dangerous…& dumb”.

    • @user-nh3gu1ge3d
      @user-nh3gu1ge3d Před 2 lety +1

      @@darkwater482 "He knows it even if you don’t" provide evidence for this statement. Oh, you can't. Shocker. This is objectionable (calls for speculation).
      "The title of the original video was “This was dangerous…& dumb”." Right, pulling the stump out. That has nothing to do with Warn being a higher quality tool than harbor freights line and is a non sequitur designed to seem like you're making a good point. You aren't.

    • @vafornow
      @vafornow Před 2 lety +13

      @@darkwater482 neither the harbor freight or Warne is made to pull stumps out of the ground. If he was winching himself or another vehicle out of mud or snow, I think the harbor freight would have been fine.

    • @alanwestport
      @alanwestport Před 2 lety +11

      @@user-nh3gu1ge3d If you know little about winches then why are you injecting yourself into a conversation about winches? The failure was a mounting point failure because of flexing and the reviewer is placing the blame on the winch.

  • @Bornstellar
    @Bornstellar Před 2 lety +166

    honestly if you're winching 20,000+ lbs with a 12,000lb winch on a $90k truck, whatever happens is your fault

    • @danbrooks8241
      @danbrooks8241 Před 2 lety

      Lol

    • @avocadogaming3942
      @avocadogaming3942 Před 2 lety +24

      imagine paying 90k truck and it's gas, not diesel 🤦

    • @CVPI03
      @CVPI03 Před 2 lety +6

      @@avocadogaming3942 but he has dual alternators

    • @gregparrott
      @gregparrott Před 2 lety +1

      While it's debatable whether Harbor is at fault or not, your statement (winching 20,000+ lbs with a 12,000lb winch) is weak. The load the winch experience never exceeded 12,000lb, or less if the line still had multiple wraps on the spool. Winches should be capable to run up to their stall load without breaking.

    • @TheDenofBadgers
      @TheDenofBadgers Před 2 lety +1

      @@gregparrott have you ever tried to pull a stump out of the ground? I've popped wheelies in a mini excavator trying to pull up stumps before, though I'm far from an expert in their use, stumps don't like to leave the ground though.

  • @ramoncampa9334
    @ramoncampa9334 Před rokem +112

    Sorry, Matt's off-road, Cassey Ladelle FAB Rats and others have used this winch in way more severe and realistic situations without failure, this is operator error, based on your video I just went and bought one

    • @silvermonk13
      @silvermonk13 Před 22 dny

      Exactly, just because he has been winching things for years doesn't mean he has been doing it right for years.

  • @TWIRKNOLOVE
    @TWIRKNOLOVE Před 2 lety +135

    As an engineer I'm really proud of the comment section here. After watching the video and disagreeing with it, I was nervous to move over to the comment section and potentially see people agree and laugh/bash at the "poor quality" winch. I really wish CZcams enables the Dislike button again. It would put this video in its rightful place with its misinformation.

    • @xntumrfo9ivrnwf
      @xntumrfo9ivrnwf Před rokem +2

      I have the browser add-on that brings back the dislike button and surprisingly, the dislike ratio isn't that bad on this video (~2k dislikes to 10k likes). Many of his other videos have way worse ratios

    • @arnold8746
      @arnold8746 Před rokem +2

      He will still see the dislikes.

    • @arnold8746
      @arnold8746 Před rokem +5

      @@xntumrfo9ivrnwf the thing is, many people stopped hitting the dislike button because they think it is pointless. Which was their whole idea behind it. But the creator can still see it either way.

    • @xntumrfo9ivrnwf
      @xntumrfo9ivrnwf Před rokem +3

      @@arnold8746 well the other benefit (before they were taken away unless you have an add-on), is it quickly showed new people that something about the video was wrong, maybe even dangerous.

    • @ProSkateNate90
      @ProSkateNate90 Před rokem +2

      Every single commenter can see it was a bias video... Went above and beyond intended use to attempt to prove his bias as well without and side by side comparison

  • @rivermike5261
    @rivermike5261 Před 2 lety +199

    It looks like to me, the Winch mount failed letting the winch body twist causing the housing to break apart. If that's the case, it is the fault of the bumper / winch mount that caused the failure...

    • @wobblysauce
      @wobblysauce Před 2 lety +9

      Bingo, you can remount the winch with a bent barrel and it will still work.

    • @JoeGraves24
      @JoeGraves24 Před 2 lety +7

      This guy! Exactly. Either the bumper mount or a bolt sheared

    • @slingflur
      @slingflur Před 2 lety +11

      Propulsion Engineer here: There appears to be significant flex in the mounting plate. Whether that led to the failure is unknown. Echoing the statements of many before me, the Apex winch was exposed to loads well beyond its capacity. Stating many times over that you do not have experience with Aspens, some prep work and research would have better aided you in its removal.
      What I do agree with is the overall build quality of the winch should reviewed. Places where thermal energy and Joule heating are present should have preventative measures in place to prevent ignition or thermal overload. The components around any electrical connection under load should exceed the NFPA for plastics and be self extinguishing, or simply be made of non-carbon material.
      I would to have loved to have seen this load with a tension gauge. I willing wager you doubled its capacity. Love to see a Warn / Apex face off.

    • @thetzarofthemountain8222
      @thetzarofthemountain8222 Před 2 lety +4

      In the original video it said the mount broke and the winch started to destroy itself

    • @slingflur
      @slingflur Před 2 lety +7

      @@thetzarofthemountain8222 he absolutely did. Its unfair to blame a company that gave him free equipment, abuse it then blame it on faulty build. There are countless products that, if tested to catastrophic failure, will create similar results. Take note: Cody has not liked one reply to this video yet.

  • @steveschwab922
    @steveschwab922 Před 2 lety +336

    Integrity starts with being honest with yourself. You sure you want to blame the winch?

    • @andrewk8636
      @andrewk8636 Před 2 lety +32

      Way over weight limit. Way past the duty cycles and the mounting plate bent which caused the winch to break.

    • @tonymarrazzo354
      @tonymarrazzo354 Před 2 lety +23

      @@andrewk8636 That was exactly what I was thinking. If it the winch was bolted to something stout enough it shouldn't have been able to twist like that. I would look for a new winch mount before I toasted a Warn winch too. Any winch that was allowed to flex like that would fail in my opinion.

    • @ut_punkn1859
      @ut_punkn1859 Před 2 lety +25

      yeah but remember 30 years ago he use to mop the floors at Warn which makes him a subject matter expert lol.

    • @rickmcdonald1557
      @rickmcdonald1557 Před rokem +1

      My thoughts exactly~!!

    • @officialWWM
      @officialWWM Před rokem

      Lol, exactly!

  • @jordanturner4759
    @jordanturner4759 Před 2 lety +256

    I mean honestly, it's videos like this... The reason why I take alot of what you say, the positions you hold and the products you push with a grain of salt. I used to think you were a solid source of info but every other video just reinforces that you're at all the expert at things you think or sale yourself to be. This video wasn't fair to Harbor Freight and chock full of so many plot-holes. You knew damn well that winch (any winch of that rating) would find this job impossible.
    "No I didn't. No I didn't." Yes you did, Cody. Yes you did.

    • @ufc990
      @ufc990 Před rokem +21

      Well said this was eye opening, everyone's human amd makes mistakes but as you said I'm going to be watching with a grain of salt from now on, hope this was just a slip and I don't see much more of it.

    • @spacemanbill9501
      @spacemanbill9501 Před rokem +4

      Pulling a stump was stubbornness and ego for sure, we all have that in us tho. But, a simple shutoff mechanism is something a cheap brand should not cheap out on.

  • @jonathonmcmillan9410
    @jonathonmcmillan9410 Před 2 lety +27

    I was on the fence about the Apex 12k winch, but this video has convinced me that it'll do the job if used properly. It's probably worth the $600 compared to an $1800 Warn. If I need to pull stumps, I'll use my backhoe to break up the ground, then cut up the roots before I hook up the winch and start pulling orthogonal to the stump.

  • @curtwhite876
    @curtwhite876 Před 2 lety +113

    If memory serves, a Warn winch was smoked in the same video...

    • @JMAAD
      @JMAAD Před 2 lety +9

      correct he misused both

    • @Dudeinator
      @Dudeinator Před 2 lety +1

      The winches in the video was only use up ro their rated load. The Warn shut off due to the thermal switch but did fry the relay, which is a problem, but a smaller issue. While the HF destoryed itself before reaching its thermal limit.

  • @cashman37able
    @cashman37able Před 2 lety +227

    Replace it with the warn and try pulling another stump. I'm willing to bet it fails also.

    • @supersami7748
      @supersami7748 Před 2 lety +11

      @@michaelarnold2294 I’ve made a couple of comments on this and I wouldn’t dare hook my 16K Warn up to that stump. I’m quite sure I would have some sort of damage, I’ve seen it happen to many times on Jeep’s and trucks over the last 5 decades. All different makes and sizes of winches.

    • @Taudlitz
      @Taudlitz Před 2 lety +8

      @@michaelarnold2294 Im pretty sure there is information in that winch manual if it is equiped with thermal switch or not. If it does not have this feature it was 100% operator fault for not reading instructions and pushing the tool far beyond what it was designed for.

    • @RealitySurvival
      @RealitySurvival Před 2 lety +2

      The warn did also fail in the original vid.

    • @Dudeinator
      @Dudeinator Před 2 lety

      @@supersami7748 yeah, I assume your winch has been used many times? Each winch has a fatigue limit from repeated loading and unloading. Itd definetly tax the winch whem pulling max capacity but the warn should be rated at a high fatigue count to not fail during use. They probably can handle millions of cycles up to its max load. Though it is posisble to abuse them before causing hidden damage that will get exposed.

    • @TrueScandinavia
      @TrueScandinavia Před 2 lety +8

      ​@@michaelarnold2294 He literally admitted in the original video that he "might have fried the relays" on the Warn, so yes it did fail and did not shut off to prevent catastrophic failure. Sure it might not have been an actual structural failure like the Harbor Freight, but any product is bound to break if you pull four times the advertised max weight, especially if it's not fastened correctly (which seems to have been the case). The fact that HF replaced it is amazing given the user-side abuse.

  • @mikehowe96
    @mikehowe96 Před 2 lety +5

    I once tried to move a building with my truck using a shoestring, the shoestring broke, must be that the shoestring was junk and not that a virtually immovable object was part of the equation.

  • @truckevich
    @truckevich Před rokem +71

    After watching this video, I am super impressed with the badlands winch and will be buying one in the future

  • @bobm5951
    @bobm5951 Před 2 lety +363

    I'm still gonna go with Operator Error. I don't care what someone has done to whatever with any winch, they're not meant for trying to pull stumps. Especially when you don't bother to dig them first.

    • @quintili1
      @quintili1 Před 2 lety +25

      Not to mention having the truck anchored to a tractor, so there is zero give. I just can't blame the winch here.

    • @williamdebow3478
      @williamdebow3478 Před 2 lety +12

      @Sven3xs That street truck was attached to a farm tractor and that stump was NOT coming out of the ground with ANY winch unless it has been compromised with digging or cutting roots. What should have happened was a thermal overload shut the winch down before it self destructed. If the winch had not been the weak link it would have bent the frame on that Ford truck. There always has to be a weak link to protect against catastrophic damage.

    • @jaytrock3217
      @jaytrock3217 Před 2 lety +7

      Pulling up an Aspen stump is a lot different than a normal stump.

    • @RealitySurvival
      @RealitySurvival Před 2 lety

      Fair point for sure.

    • @williamdebow3478
      @williamdebow3478 Před 2 lety +11

      @@jaytrock3217 Exactly, that stump did not budge at all and He was about to pull that truck in two. Hooking it to a tractor only meant something was going to get damaged.

  • @shopnwoods9901
    @shopnwoods9901 Před 2 lety +362

    Time for an apples to apples, Warn vs Apex winch competition.

    • @GoingOffGrid101
      @GoingOffGrid101 Před 2 lety +4

      PLEASE DO THIS!

    • @shopnwoods9901
      @shopnwoods9901 Před 2 lety +3

      @Tony Costa Agreed. That stump might have put up to big a fight for a Warn too.

    • @mikel734
      @mikel734 Před 2 lety

      Seems like a perfect video for someone like projectfarm.

  • @livewithnick
    @livewithnick Před 2 lety +15

    After watching channels such as Matt’s Off-road Recovery and Fab Rats plus several more using these winches daily with no problems I don’t believe the winch was the problem.

    • @RockmanDash
      @RockmanDash Před 11 měsíci +3

      You do know they are getting paid by harbor freight right?

    • @livewithnick
      @livewithnick Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@RockmanDash Im definitely not getting paid and my two have worked flawless for a few years with moderate use.

  • @alfredmartinez1563
    @alfredmartinez1563 Před rokem +12

    I fallow Matt's of road recovery and Fab rats on CZcams and they both use these badland winches so I bought one have put it through hell and they hold up just fine.

    • @om617yota7
      @om617yota7 Před rokem +2

      Just mounted one of these on my truck, exactly because of MORR, Fab Rats, and Casey Ladelle. If one of these winches lasts a year with those guys, it'll last me the rest of my life.

  • @ataglancepaul
    @ataglancepaul Před 2 lety +215

    I know what he means. I bought a banana and imagine how unhappy I was to find it wouldn’t drive a nail in a block of wood. Unbelievable 🤦🏻‍♂️

  • @Diaphanic1
    @Diaphanic1 Před 2 lety +157

    To be fair, aspen stumps are all interconnected with the other aspen stumps/roots/trees....so that was a crazy tug

    • @MrOzzy281
      @MrOzzy281 Před 2 lety +10

      Then the winch should cut out or just not exceed its pulling capacity.

    • @Diaphanic1
      @Diaphanic1 Před 2 lety +2

      @@MrOzzy281 that’s a fair point, too, and the point he makes in this video....before seeing the video in question, though, is would have assumed the onus was on the wench owner should he overload the wench...I’m sure we’ll see some videos spurred by this of where and when these wenches fail and how....just but them between two anchors with a load meter...would be interesting.

    • @MrOzzy281
      @MrOzzy281 Před 2 lety

      @@Diaphanic1 overloading the winch should be impossible. Even if it had a leader line that would be better. The cable that came with this winch already completely melted anyway. Whole thing is laughable

    • @davegibs4761
      @davegibs4761 Před 2 lety +1

      @@MrOzzy281 Nah, can you imagine the uproar of customers if their wench kept automatically cutting out to save itself. People would lose their minds. Customers want to push products like this beyond what the engineers establish as the safe operating window.

    • @MrOzzy281
      @MrOzzy281 Před 2 lety

      @@davegibs4761 then you'd just get a more powerful Winch.... I'd prefer something that knows its limitations allowing me to gear it

  • @andymichael8576
    @andymichael8576 Před 2 lety +9

    I think I'm on the side of most of the people in the comments here Cody... Your Warn failed in the same video, the stump was not a fair use for this winch, and the mount seems to have failed... Could you at least give the badlands another try? It sounds like Harbor Freight is willing to work with you and you just want to cause drama and blame someone else for your failure.

  • @jmcguire5151
    @jmcguire5151 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Old video but winches just don't twist, unless the mounting plate is garbage.

  • @legendarypillow1450
    @legendarypillow1450 Před 2 lety +217

    Let’s be honest, the winch wouldn’t work anyways, no matter what brand. It was a dumb idea and you should’ve used an excavator.

    • @anthonytacolla6731
      @anthonytacolla6731 Před 2 lety +12

      Of which he actually owns

    • @rc9660
      @rc9660 Před 2 lety +16

      @@anthonytacolla6731 He borrowed it from a neighbor and it pulled the tree, no winch could've pulled that root laden stump.

    • @cdawg9149
      @cdawg9149 Před rokem

      I have dug out my fair share of stumps with a back hoe. Some easy while some just dont give it up.

    • @Platoon3090
      @Platoon3090 Před rokem

      Exactly. This guy is getting dumb.

    • @dougr1629
      @dougr1629 Před rokem +2

      Maybe he just wasn’t happy with the amount of free stuff he was getting from Harbor freight.

  • @wilson8378
    @wilson8378 Před 2 lety +201

    I don't get it.
    The Warn failed in the same video, how can he say he won't use a HF winch and is going back to Warn when it also failed. The Warn was only a 9,000 lb winch, sure, but he said he might have fried the relays. They both would have left you stranded, stranded from pulling your tank out of the ditch.

    • @trailblazer632
      @trailblazer632 Před 2 lety +23

      Hes a warn brand snob. Watch his unboxing video of the apex winch. He litterally bitches about the aluminum hawse having "badlands" cast into it because "maybe people dont want to advertise" lol.

    • @nunya3163
      @nunya3163 Před 2 lety +5

      I believe that his logic is that the Warren was a simple electrical trip, and not a structural failure.

    • @willb3018
      @willb3018 Před 2 lety +16

      He can be fun to watch but this is not the channel for solid unbiased reviews of anything. Do your homework. Also, see if Project Farm has done a review of anything in which you may be interested.

    • @nunya3163
      @nunya3163 Před 2 lety +16

      @@willb3018 Project Farm is the best.

    • @nunya3163
      @nunya3163 Před 2 lety +10

      @@chadschafer1723 Oh, I 100% agree. And I believe that the failure was because the mount flexed, when it needs to be rigid for this design. That winch can only twist like that, if the mount it is on, is also twisting. That said, there is a point about having internal safeties to prevent catastrophic failure.

  • @theamaturepro
    @theamaturepro Před 9 měsíci +5

    I fully believe this winch held up its end of the bargain. I love that you tested it beyond its limits! The fact that it literally self destructed before it quit is impressive. Your videos on this tool have convinced me to get one. Thanks for all you do. I realize this is 2 years after you posted this content, but it's still worth the comment.

  • @bryanepp5340
    @bryanepp5340 Před rokem +1

    We used to pull a lot of stumps on the farm. We never risked pulling a stump straight out of the ground because of the danger involved. We would dig around that stump, chop all the roots we possibly could, save the tap root, and then we'd use a large tractor with a chain, and no jerking, and it would usually come. I'm not being disrespectful, but this setup for pulling your stump with the winch, looks like a good opportunity for some hardware through the windshield.

  • @garyroach3479
    @garyroach3479 Před 2 lety +285

    I have used Warn winches the biggest they got and I have broken them also used winches on trucks better specially-designed for oilfield operation and broken them and I've also used winches on recovery trucks for the towing industry and have broken them also the problem is Cody you didn't do no prep work on that stump to remove it from the ground and being a man that lives in the woods you should have knew better I've seen recovery lines that they use in the logging industry braking bringing logs up from bottom to landings if a person from central USA can see u failed to do prep work first dont blaim the equipment when it fails it all falls on u the operator not the equipment

    • @wisnoskij
      @wisnoskij Před 2 lety +7

      Winches that cost more than 100 buck can easily be designed to not destroy themselves when pulling past their strength.

    • @vortexan9804
      @vortexan9804 Před 2 lety +14

      @@wisnoskij So if it shuts down, then the complaint
      is hey, it didn't work, it just shut down, didn't get the job done.

    • @wisnoskij
      @wisnoskij Před 2 lety +3

      @@vortexan9804 You cannot seriously believe that?

    • @littlejackalo5326
      @littlejackalo5326 Před 2 lety +4

      Nope. It shouldn't break. It would be able to pull up until a thermal cut off. You claim to have "broken them," implying you've broken MULTIPLE warn winches, and I just think you're full of it. Or your definition of broken is burnt out relays, and not sheared bolts and cracked housing. Either way, it should be able to pull without breaking, even against an immovable object. There is absolutely no way to know when to stop of you're pulling too much. The stupidity of the "sTuMp pReP wOrK" argument is weak. Nothing you do, after the line leaves the winch, will alter the output force generated by the winch. You can put 100 pulleys on the line and it wouldn't change the amount of force on the winch when attached to the stationary object.

    • @garyroach3479
      @garyroach3479 Před 2 lety +6

      Well all i know is Cody and Jack broke the winch trying to yank a ash tree stump out of ground without doing any prep work on stump also if u look at way they where set up to do it u wonder why cable didnt snap bc if u trying to pull more then what winch is rated for ur going to break things and betting Cody messed up his fancy bumper on truck bc winch twisted on support platform he had it mounted on to i would say also 99.9% of winch have over load protection system built into them inless u disable it and i am betting Cody did that bc their is no way it twisted on its own and if it would have twisted it would have been on gear side not mtor side

  • @P_steez
    @P_steez Před 2 lety +116

    For someone who claims to be so very knowledgeable about forestry, you’d think you’d have the foresight to atleast partially dig up one of the most heavily rooted trees in the world.

    • @P_steez
      @P_steez Před 2 lety +16

      Not a whole lot of sense considering you’ll go back to warn when you burnt one out in the same video

    • @ericbest9562
      @ericbest9562 Před rokem +3

      For real, on one of our logging tracks we cleared the grading company was right on our heals stumping as we went, they had a komatsu 390 and a 490 doing the stumping and if you are familiar with a 490, that is a dang machine right there! And like you said, dig around the stump first, even as big as that 490 is he still had to dig around the stump to pull them up, that monster still couldn't just reach out and snatch them out of the ground, not even 12-14 inch stuff

    • @jsaeteun
      @jsaeteun Před rokem +4

      Harbor freight must be loving the comments. 😆

  • @bradmatte4645
    @bradmatte4645 Před 2 lety +17

    I'm an engineer. I am not seeing where the critical failure occurred. A broken piece of a housing is not a critical failure. Does it still work? Can we see how it was mounted? Maybe that was contributed to the housing crack. Also, did you exceed the maximum load? All important questions.
    The plastic piece that was covering the copper should be made of a non-combustible flexible material. Which is an oversight on the part of the Badland Apex engineering team.

  • @Miami_tree_house
    @Miami_tree_house Před 9 měsíci +2

    Let's see another 12000lbs winch pull that stump without a couple of snatch blocks......

  • @tompeltoma8531
    @tompeltoma8531 Před 2 lety +43

    I always thought that a winch was a recovery tool to get your vehicle or another vehicle unstuck from mud and such or to maybe move an “unanchored”object closer to your vehicle. To expect any winch to pull an unprepared stump is ludicrous. I think most thinking people would take one of those expensive tractors and at least dig around the stump to break up the root system a little. To blame a piece of equipment for failing to do something that it wasn’t designed for makes no sense. Testing a Warne winch against a Harbor Frieght winch is pointless. This is the same as people using a long cheater bar (pipe) on a wrench and then wondering why the wrench broke and then top it offf by blaming the wrench for breaking. Just like a lot of things now days, people don’t want to own up to their mistakes. Just blame someone or something else for the problem.

  • @nunya3163
    @nunya3163 Před 2 lety +22

    Another CZcamsr had a similar failure. Their conclusion was that the mount was not sufficiently rigid. This design does require a rigid base to keep from twisting.
    I would check the mount on the truck, for evidence of deflection.

  • @coastalgaming1594
    @coastalgaming1594 Před 2 lety +6

    Hmmm this may not be the whole story. Cody could you spend some time looking at the new bumper and show us the current condition of the mounting location of the winch showing if the plate is still flat/true. It looks like the winch is critically dependent on the durability of the mounting plate and if that mounting plate twists then the winch will twist and break like we see here. Seems like the only way for a winch manufacturer to not be dependent on the mounting plate is to incorporate one in the design, meaning that the open area under that spool would be one solid piece and the winch design is clearly three pieces as you have shown. Not an expert here and I can only see what you have shown us in the footage.

  • @greenlandworx5588
    @greenlandworx5588 Před 2 lety +15

    When he says I'm not a engineer but a multi million dollar corporation at the end of the video it really shows his character

    • @livewithnick
      @livewithnick Před 2 lety +2

      You sure he didn’t say “at a multimillion dollar corporation”?

    • @alvindueck2104
      @alvindueck2104 Před rokem +2

      @@livewithnick he said he IS one, not AT one

  • @HaJoSchatz
    @HaJoSchatz Před 2 lety +183

    Cody, engineer here, not related to the winch business though...
    I'd really love to see a bit more detail about that winch failure. You showed a cracked top and side cover, but those can't be load-bearing; way too flimsy. Which load-bearing part snapped, actually? The fasteners? The frame of the winch? It's still a mystery to me what happened there but as a shot in the dark, I'd guess the whole winch got ripped out of the anchor points and smashed into your bar, shattering the winch's housing. Problem of the winch or the mount?
    Also, to that plastic cover: Yeah, those fins are a bit strange; probably a way to avoid debris accumulating across the rails. However do note that quite a few plastic materials are flame inhibiting (PVC is a good candidate, fire fighters typically know this and it's noxious properties ;-) ). Try to light it _outdoors_ and see if it catches or self-extinguishes...

    • @willclawson911
      @willclawson911 Před 2 lety +7

      I'd love to see a follow up video on this

    • @HaJoSchatz
      @HaJoSchatz Před 2 lety +10

      So I went back to the installation video. Around 8:30 - is that the winch fixed with a fastener through the slot? With only a small washer in-between?

    • @TuckerDowns
      @TuckerDowns Před 2 lety +5

      I agree. I watched the video to see what the failure mode was. Never shown.

    • @jokly1264
      @jokly1264 Před 2 lety +3

      Excellent assessment here.

    • @11c86
      @11c86 Před rokem +1

      I’d like to see details on how the winch was mounted to the truck along with other failure mode details. Also, I’d like to see a Warn winch pull that same stump.

  • @andrewowens5254
    @andrewowens5254 Před 2 lety +100

    I think there is a huge difference in the amount of force needed to pull a car out of the ditch then it would be to pull a green stump with a root system the size of a small car.

    • @kostasjelo1719
      @kostasjelo1719 Před 2 lety

      But still i believe that having it on a car on fresh grass HUGELY lowers the friction which means i dont believe it even got to its limit force. You simply cant have a winch fail while towing something from a car on a grass field before even the car starts sliding. This means it cant even tow that car on THAT field. Like come on!

    • @reiserx
      @reiserx Před 2 lety +2

      Well accentually he was pulling a truck attached to a tree, so it should have just dragged the truck. I think it was more of a mounting issue that allowed it to twist.

    • @patrickwiseman2012
      @patrickwiseman2012 Před 2 lety +3

      @@reiserx the truck was attached to a tractor with the front forks dug into the ground

    • @jaytrock3217
      @jaytrock3217 Před 2 lety +2

      @@patrickwiseman2012 Nothing like stretching a frame of a vehicle.

    • @darkwater482
      @darkwater482 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jaytrock3217 he’s lucky the winch broke. I saw a guy with a pto winch pull his frame in two. It sounded like a bomb went off.

  • @mmaaddict78
    @mmaaddict78 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I hate this winch because it broke when I tried to pull the continents of Africa and South America back together, the way that they were hundreds of millions of years ago.

  • @jonathanechols9985
    @jonathanechols9985 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Sounds like operator deficiency.

  • @eawojcik45
    @eawojcik45 Před 2 lety +329

    Cody, I’ve been watching for a long time and respect your opinion on most things but I think you may be missing the mark on this one. As others have said that tree wasn’t coming out with any winch because of the root system. And with a failure like that I would look at the mounting strategy of the winch more than the winch itself. I believe it may be possible that the winch was operating within its normal limits but because the truck was so rigid because of its size and the tines on the tractor being dug in coupled with the mechanical advantage of the winch rope and snatch block you may have actually had a failure of the bumper. I believe with it being aluminum it may have flexed resulting in the situation you find yourself in now. I have a badlands winch and while I definitely do not have the experience you do with winching this sort of failure in my opinion cannot he fully attributed to the winch. Just food for thought. Have a great day.

    • @RealitySurvival
      @RealitySurvival Před 2 lety +12

      Agree. Excellent point.

    • @treywright3591
      @treywright3591 Před 2 lety +2

      1 point I'd like to make is that he broke boke the harbor freight and the warn winch. The Warn which just burned up the relays, the Badland unit snapped in half. Pretty major quality difference there I think.

    • @snorklepig2000
      @snorklepig2000 Před 2 lety +7

      @@treywright3591 The HF was all cosmetic damage no? I’m no winch expert but that seems to be what he was showing/explaining.

    • @jaytrock3217
      @jaytrock3217 Před 2 lety +10

      He anchored the truck. Meaning he probably sketched the frame. Never do that on a new truck. 2nd for be into forestry so much. Can't believe he doesn't know how the Aspen root structure is. Never going to be able to winch it out. Maybe with a tank recover vehicle. Notice how the Harbor Freight winch doesn't have a bottom. That means the winch depends on a good mount and the fairlead not to twist. I think one of the anchor bolts on the mount snapped. If you look at the video and listen at 0:40 something happens before you the twist of the winch.

    • @andrewnickles3119
      @andrewnickles3119 Před 2 lety +13

      @@treywright3591 the warn quit because it was overloaded. The badlands wasn't overloaded, it broke because it wasn't mounted properly, causing it to bream.

  • @henrik888
    @henrik888 Před 2 lety +474

    I don't think pulling a tree stump that size with any kind of winch could work either way.. the roots of a tree are as big as the crown, and the stump itself was thick too

    • @jordanott5464
      @jordanott5464 Před 2 lety +73

      I think it was put under much more pressure than it should have been. The truck and tractor on one end and the stump not even partially dug out on the other and who knows how many roots there were. I don't know if this is quite a fair test. If you put it under more load than it advertises what exactly do you expect?

    • @willierants5880
      @willierants5880 Před 2 lety +27

      My thoughts as well.

    • @LordXadro
      @LordXadro Před 2 lety +90

      Its not that it didnt work, but that it worked itself to death instead of shutting itself of before it failed like that

    • @orionfixr7713
      @orionfixr7713 Před 2 lety +18

      That was a pretty good sized stump and he did have the tractor on site . With the equipment on hand , I would have dug it up some at least . It would be interesting to know just how much pressure was put on that wench .

    • @Dudeinator
      @Dudeinator Před 2 lety +32

      Of its rated for 12000lbs that means it should be able to withstand the torque reqiured to tension a rope up to 12,000lbs without destroying itself.

  • @sirgeorgescott2995
    @sirgeorgescott2995 Před rokem +1

    That has to be over 60 thousand pounds of resistance being pulled when the tree stump is that size. That winch is only rated to drag 12 thousand pounds of resistance. Remember, it is not the weight of an item; it's the amount of resistance measured in pounds that matters.

  • @robo5391
    @robo5391 Před 2 lety +3

    I believe the mounting plate flexed or bent can we get a picture of that?

  • @tonyu2449
    @tonyu2449 Před 2 lety +237

    Opinions are like....... that said, when I saw the winching video, I was thinking to myself, surely he couldn’t possibly expect a winch to pull a stump like that without any prep work done to the ground around it at all? Well, I was wrong. I don’t think a winch should be used like that, ever, that being said, I completely agree with the statement that the winch should shut itself off before twisting and breaking like that for sure. Easy fix for the manufacturer. Wish you would have had a scale on the line to measure how much force was on that winch line, I would expect it was grossly exceeding the rating of the winch in that situation.

    • @sdfsdf2205
      @sdfsdf2205 Před 2 lety +5

      Easy fix? Or so stubborn to not spend more money on testing & redesigning to make a solid product.

    • @tonyu2449
      @tonyu2449 Před 2 lety +6

      @@sdfsdf2205 easy fix as in something easy to correct, whether they spent enough time and money on engineering is a question we won’t ever know the answer to. They should be able to engineer a thermal shutdown relatively easily that can simply replace that buss bar that Cody described had gotten hot. Replace that with a thermal breaker and you have the same situation he ran into with the 9k warm in the video, shut off because it got to hot trying to wind up against an unreasonable amount of line pull. The thermal overload should obviously shut off before the body twists enough to break, causing the catastrophic failure seen here.

    • @mrbunnylamakins518
      @mrbunnylamakins518 Před 2 lety +8

      I was just about to type the same thing, I never seen any pull a stump with out digging out around it.

    • @supersami7748
      @supersami7748 Před 2 lety +9

      I think a good analogy is don’t buy a F150 and try and use it like a F550, or even a F450.

    • @deibert1
      @deibert1 Před 2 lety +7

      i was saying the same thing. not a snowballs chance of that winch pulling that stump without breaking something. we have used a d4cat with winch and it wasn't able to pull an alder stump without it being dug out first. so he's truly talking hot air. until he puts the warn in the same situation. hell my buddies tow company has 2 of the badlands 12k lb winches on their rollbacks. and we've pulled cars up 40ft embankments with them.

  • @henridube3184
    @henridube3184 Před 2 lety +93

    I love your content and reviews on tools Cody, but I thought this one was quite harsh on harbor freight. If I’m honest with you I don’t think a warn winch would be able to pull out that aspen stump either. After working for a tree surgeon I know that the root bowl is just as big as the crown of the tree so I think it was unfair to expect a winch to pull out a stump of that size especially without any work on the ground to free things up a bit. Besides, you highlighted the point that winches are for towing things or pulling yourself out of a sticky situation, so they were clearly designed to use the tree as an anchor instead of pulling it out! But if you are so confident in warn winches then it’s only fair that you put one up to the same test without any mercy. Love your vids and keep up the good content!

    • @brahtrumpwonbigly7309
      @brahtrumpwonbigly7309 Před 2 lety +2

      He didn't claim it would pull the stump, he claimed the winch should have survived the attempt.

    • @jamesleary1405
      @jamesleary1405 Před 2 lety +3

      @@brahtrumpwonbigly7309 And the second failed do to user error and mounting plate had to shift in order for the housing to shift like it did.

    • @montecarlo6.0turbo
      @montecarlo6.0turbo Před 6 měsíci

      Bet warn would failure to lets see video of warn doing same thing i have same winch on my car trailer last year and works great u get what u pay for

  • @suburbanhobbyist2752
    @suburbanhobbyist2752 Před 2 lety +2

    "Let's pull it apart and see what happened" But you didn't do that. I still don't know how it failed. The housing means next to nothing. Did the actual motor fry? Does it still work? I mean the housing broke and pushed the plastic part into contact with the power which made it melt but that isn't the failure either. I'm really curious if that winch still works?

  • @shopshack1620
    @shopshack1620 Před 2 lety +1

    I agree the mount was not strong enough and led to the breakage. The other issue is - would the plastic have caught fire? I work for a company that builds AC powered devices. When we injection mold wire enclosure boxes, we have to use an FR (fire rated), self extinguishing plastic to meet the UL standard. He is jumping to conclusions unless he has investigated it beyond what he is saying in the video.

  • @CB-yh3ov
    @CB-yh3ov Před 2 lety +31

    You tried to pull the stump with a 10000 lbs winch that was trippled and it didn‘t work.
    Then you used the harbor freight 12000lbs winch and doubled it. How should this have worked?

  • @Jcolinsol
    @Jcolinsol Před 2 lety +35

    Sounds like THIS is a job for Project Farm

  • @rmccarrillo1759
    @rmccarrillo1759 Před 2 lety +1

    I herd what you said. I just saw it not doing what you said. No stuck trucks. No people stuck on cliffs. For a second, I thought you would use a tractor to get that trunk out. I know I would.. I have done it too...
    I just saw it in action by a group of people that tow for a living. Thanks Matt's Offroad Recovery. They are the best. Equipment being used correctly. Pushing it to the limit. I'm off to get that very same one.

  • @brentoneal5989
    @brentoneal5989 Před 2 lety +4

    I saw another video that the winch broke in the same way. It was caused by the mounting plate flexing. Could that have been the cause?

  • @chrisdavis6789
    @chrisdavis6789 Před 2 lety +43

    I generally like your videos but I watched the video of you pulling the stump and you did start out with a Warn Winch and it failed before you brought out the bigger truck and this Badland winch. You even said that the wheel you used as a fulcrum was likely to crack and fail because of the pressure and did it anyway. You staked down your tractor, chained behind your 9klb Ford and then blame the winch for pulling past it's max capacity on a stump that was clearly rooted. This isn't a winch failure, this is a process failure because you should have used that backhoe first to dig out around that stump.
    This is pretty disingenuous since you didn't mention about the Warn failing first.

  • @LakePresley
    @LakePresley Před 2 lety +51

    Would like to see an attempt of the same test with a warn...

    • @wilson8378
      @wilson8378 Před 2 lety +8

      He used the Warn in the same video. It was only a 9,000 pound one, but it failed too.

    • @LakePresley
      @LakePresley Před 2 lety

      Wilson he used the warn after clearing dirt and some of the root ball with the mini ex.

    • @maxd1384
      @maxd1384 Před 2 lety +4

      @@LakePresley He used the warn at the very first, burnt it up, then pulled up the new truck and did the same.

  • @optimusprime6889
    @optimusprime6889 Před 2 lety +1

    “What do I know… I’m just just a multi-million dollar corporation.” Mic drop 🎤 💥💥

  • @100texan2
    @100texan2 Před 2 lety +2

    With it all said and done you can’t beat a pto operated winch. A REAL WINCH!

  • @AlphaBobFloridaOverlord
    @AlphaBobFloridaOverlord Před 2 lety +22

    The winch DID NOT FAIL! The winch mount failed. If it was on a sufficiently rigid mount it would not have twisted.

    • @Riverdale__Murrrland
      @Riverdale__Murrrland Před rokem +1

      I wish HF would sue him! He’s a joke and I can’t figure out for the life of me he has so many followers 😮

  • @Sleepdroidstudios
    @Sleepdroidstudios Před 2 lety +523

    When you did the zoom in at 0:40 there is clearly movement withing the bumper itself as the winch popped and the bumper snapped back into place. I'd say that your aluminum mounting plate, or bumper as a whole, flexed a little too much. Can't really blame the winch for that one.

    • @jaytrock3217
      @jaytrock3217 Před 2 lety +31

      I was thinking that one of the anchor bolts snapped. Which allowed the frame of the winch to twist.

    • @ElectronicsForFun
      @ElectronicsForFun Před 2 lety +14

      well it had pressure on it so it was flexing the frame of the truck. shouldn't have made a difference with the winch because the bumper itself wasn't flexing so the mounting hardware wasn't flexing either. for high strength applications, like a 12,000lbs winch, you should use steel and not aluminum. a winch made out of aluminum just seems like a bad idea.

    • @culbyj3665
      @culbyj3665 Před 2 lety +34

      @@jaytrock3217 THIS Jay exactly and that did not sound Like plastic snapping nor did it sound like the small bolt snapping that holds that cover ON. I think the mount failed wether it was the truck or base of the winch. BUT YOUR correct without a doubt he needs to show the truck side and its interesting he didnt show the underside of the winch itself...

    • @thesmallwoodlot433
      @thesmallwoodlot433 Před 2 lety +32

      I think he is holding back something my self, and if he really wanted that winch to tug on that stump, he should have given the winch a little help, along with using a block and tackle, not a car tire and a chain!

    • @Terrellnoodles810
      @Terrellnoodles810 Před 2 lety

      I watch ur videos sleep droid

  • @parkermtb16
    @parkermtb16 Před 8 měsíci +1

    If it twisted your mount plate is twisted. Your mount failed thus causing the winch to fail!

  • @jkropp1873
    @jkropp1873 Před 2 lety +2

    When the plate you mount a winch to flexes, all winches will fail in this manner. Seen it twice.

  • @seafarermarinesupply9869
    @seafarermarinesupply9869 Před 2 lety +28

    given the nature of that failure, i would say it twisted. check the mount on the bumper to see if it flexed.

  • @Ryan_Garcia
    @Ryan_Garcia Před 2 lety +56

    Cant wait to see the warn pull out some aspen stumps!

    • @spudly602
      @spudly602 Před 2 lety +8

      Yeah except it's broken and needs a rebuilt lol

    • @howardwilliams8993
      @howardwilliams8993 Před 2 lety +4

      He'll never do it!

    • @supersami7748
      @supersami7748 Před 2 lety +5

      Yes, with the same amount of (or lack of) prep work around the base.

  • @rctenn
    @rctenn Před 2 lety +2

    This is for vehicle recovery. It’s not a stump puller. Use the right tool for the job. You hammer with your wrenches?

  • @scottbourke4428
    @scottbourke4428 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Completely absurd to blame the winch and call it a fire hazard!

  • @alexbroschat6816
    @alexbroschat6816 Před 2 lety +12

    I don't understand how the main body of the winch twisted if the mounting plate in the bumper didn't twist. I'd like to see that bumper to prove that it wasn't the culprit. If the mounting points on the winch didn't break, how was the rest of it able to twist? Science

    • @jasonac
      @jasonac Před 2 lety +6

      maybe a wheel alignment also to see how badly the trucks frame is wrecked from stretching it between two fixed objects - stump and tractor.

    • @yesac101
      @yesac101 Před 2 lety +1

      If I recall correctly the bumper is aluminum not steel a 12k winch should be mounted to a 1/4in steel plate you would need a much thicker aluminum plate to achieve the same resistance to deflection

  • @gummy1188
    @gummy1188 Před 2 lety +87

    Not trying to be a know-it-all, but aspen trees have an interlinking root system, which would make them hard to pull out without any prep done to the ground or the roots first, so it might be a tiny bit unfair to judge it by that standard

    • @StevenAndrews
      @StevenAndrews Před 2 lety +3

      Aspen are the largest single biomass. A forest is all one plant.

    • @chrishall897
      @chrishall897 Před 2 lety

      But in that case don’t you think the truck should have been pulled towards the stump? That didn’t happen

    • @jake4x41982
      @jake4x41982 Před 2 lety +4

      @@chrishall897 it was strapped to tractor that was anchored

    • @huethehand1
      @huethehand1 Před 2 lety

      @@chrishall897 it did happen till he anckerd the truck to the tractor

  • @ericjohnson6016
    @ericjohnson6016 Před 2 lety +2

    Wow you can see the twist in the front of the trucks mounting plate I would look in to that before the winch. People blame cars and trucks all the time for sliding off the road when actually it’s the tires. I say bolt on a warn and do the exact same thing see what happens.

  • @nkill6
    @nkill6 Před 2 lety +1

    Matt's off-road recovery uses these winches all the time and I've never heard of them exploding on them

  • @TacoBellCustomerService
    @TacoBellCustomerService Před 2 lety +83

    Every guy I’ve talked to on the trails swear by their Badland winches. They use and abuse them with no issues. Seems more like a misuse or a fluke in this one. It’d be interesting to test a new one on a Dynamometer and test it against a Warn.

    • @animula6908
      @animula6908 Před 2 lety +3

      I’d say yes but harbor freight made him crazy promises

    • @andrewk8636
      @andrewk8636 Před 2 lety +3

      His mounting plate was flexing. I haven't seen a single winch that was built to resist that

  • @tburda823
    @tburda823 Před 2 lety +91

    For warn to be this "gold standard" and I would generally agree, after all these years why haven't they been able to improve the IPx rating without compromising thermal venting? Accepting a "common failure" is the same across the board no matter if it's a twist in the case, or a solenoid failure from corrosion. Just because one guy can overcome a solenoid failure in the field doesn't mean every guy can. It's no less of a problem than as described in this video. You need to set your feelings aside when trying to make an "honest" video about a products weak points, and don't put another product on a pedestal as the "gold standard" that has weak points of its own. You should've left out the "I'll stick with warn" and just given an honest autopsy of the winch. This turned into nothing more than a warn advertisement.

  • @3rdcoastambit220
    @3rdcoastambit220 Před 2 lety +2

    Wait so while the Warren winch failed because it burnt-out, the Harbour Freight only snapped it's own housing because of flex in the truck bumper. How is that a catastrophic failure?

  • @brodyevans5526
    @brodyevans5526 Před 2 lety +3

    I can already see a lot of people being blocked due to their opinions (and correct opinions at that) that don't agree with Cody. 😂

  • @dcanalify
    @dcanalify Před 2 lety +61

    I am very impressed with the winch, more so now. It would recover a Super Duty and a large tractor at the same time if the front bucket had not been down to provide more anchor. At one point it was recovering both. Impressive winch to me.

    • @jeremyboecker9236
      @jeremyboecker9236 Před 2 lety +15

      Agree. Pulling out a truck and tractor at the same time BEFORE it fails is highly impressive. I will be buying this winch to use for its INTENDED purpose!

  • @raymiegrube2967
    @raymiegrube2967 Před 2 lety +40

    I think your professional home owner status came into play on this one. There was no way that stump was coming out without digging
    At the root base to release some of the hold Any winch used in the way you were mis using it would have broke

    • @ProSkateNate90
      @ProSkateNate90 Před rokem +3

      Stump grinder 80k estimate vs winch 4k estimate. Wonder why I dont see stump removal guys using winches if the WARN could easily do this...

  • @michaelcrimi99
    @michaelcrimi99 Před 2 měsíci +1

    On top of all the honest comments.... Winches are designed for rolling, or floating loads. Not static, stumps buried in the ground 3 ft. Appears to be a setup video shoot, to dishonor HF..

  • @leedye6687
    @leedye6687 Před 2 lety +1

    I guarantee if my Badlands 12k winch failed Harbor Freight would not reach out to me, or even care once I am past the 90 day warranty period. That stated, not sure any winch could have pulled out an Aspen, and you likely need to get a better bumper, one that does not flex.

  • @jacksonroberts4128
    @jacksonroberts4128 Před 2 lety +18

    I’m a minute into this little video and i can tell you what happened, a guy that should know a lot about trees didn’t know what he was doing trying to uproot an aspen stump and tore up a winch he got for free and is now making a video bashing said winch when it was really user error.

  • @BrianGib85
    @BrianGib85 Před 2 lety +110

    Hopefully you have a 12k Warn on order and will be attempting to pull the stump with it to. I know the other Warn was a 10k but will a 12k really make a difference?

    • @supersami7748
      @supersami7748 Před 2 lety +10

      For how he uses his equipment it needs to be a 16K Warn.

    • @57rumors
      @57rumors Před 2 lety +10

      @@supersami7748 lol more like a cat dozer winch.

    • @jessebond4221
      @jessebond4221 Před 2 lety

      @@57rumors exactly

    • @jessebond4221
      @jessebond4221 Před 2 lety +1

      Ive personally. Seen a cat on tracks pick its front end up off the ground trying to pull stumps using a 2-1/4" cable when my dad was a logger... They ended up using the excavator to rip them out of the ground and even that took some doing this was a full time logging outfit not just some landscaper that excavator was in excess of 50 tons and was still being lifted before the stumps let loose

    • @huethehand1
      @huethehand1 Před 2 lety +1

      @@supersami7748 he needs a 100k military winch off of a 5t truck

  • @gregr1672
    @gregr1672 Před 2 lety

    I have had a 12000 lb Bad land Winch for over 3 years and have used it for heavy work ! My biggest problem which irritated me to the point of replacing it was the winch shut off continuously when pulling . It was only during heavy pulling at first and later shut off even when running winch with no load. I used top quality battery terminal connections and kept them tight ! Ran extra grounds etc . I finally determined either the thermal breaker HF supplies you to attach to positive terminal was junk or the winch motor wad junk. I went to a commercial truck electrical supply and bought a heavy duty breaker with a reset switch . The winch now pulls without shutting down at all .I do not over pull with it ,I run bout 30 seconds than give it a break etc . The instructions on HF Bad land 12000 lb winch state that 45 seconds of winching requires about 20 minute rest period ! That is a very low Duty Cycle my friends . Frankly ,I wouldn't have bought it had I been aware of that . If and win the bad lands Dies ,I will most likely replace it with a Warn . Unless HF improves their 90 Warranty to a industry standard like everyone's else . PS ,I believe mechanically it is a decent a winch ,I expect like mist HF products I be had the electrical motor is the weak link !

  • @thatguy2105
    @thatguy2105 Před rokem +2

    I'm looking forward to your negative review video, of the aftermarket bumper on your truck. Because that is what caused the winch to fail. I am really impressed with what that winch was able to pull, before your weak mounting point failed.

  • @willyoung4512
    @willyoung4512 Před 2 lety +18

    I'm going to go out on a limb a bit here and call this a WINCH BUMPER FAILURE.
    Winches of this design REGARDLESS of manufacture TOTALLY rely on the bumper to stop the two ends from counter-rotating... which I'm nearly 100% certain was the cause of this failure.
    I'd wager this is a case of the winch being too powerful for the bumper.

    • @joma13344
      @joma13344 Před 2 lety +2

      He did mention that the bumper was Aluminum, from what I gathered in the comments in another video.

  • @seagreenspiral
    @seagreenspiral Před 2 lety +79

    Natures stumps are stronger than mans machinery.

  • @hotrodtiki200
    @hotrodtiki200 Před 2 lety +1

    I used a chainsaw to cut a birthday cake. It ruined the cake. That saw was an epic fail and i got rid of it.

  • @jerryfanai1629
    @jerryfanai1629 Před 2 lety +2

    It looks like using a .22 long rifle calibre to kill an elephant .... May be thats the case

  • @zerog2000
    @zerog2000 Před 2 lety +92

    Curious if the winch was being used within manufacturers specifications. While I believe that any quality tool should be able to exceed it, once you are outside of the envelope, who’s fault is it for failure? Manufacturer or operator?

    • @Rainaman-
      @Rainaman- Před 2 lety +6

      This is both a design flaw and a fail of propper usage. I expected the winch to not get a stump out, but not that it would self destruct like this.

    • @brahtrumpwonbigly7309
      @brahtrumpwonbigly7309 Před 2 lety +2

      When you've got two options, one that will protect itself in that situation and one that rips in half, is this even a question you need answered?

    • @ionstorm66
      @ionstorm66 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Rainaman- with synthetic line you want less layers on the drum them steel. It is very slippery against it's self, which is why the start of the line on the drum has the nylon sleeve.
      The more line you have out, the less the line pulls into itself and pushes out on the winch body. Also for something like this you should always use a snatch block.

    • @tylerty7324
      @tylerty7324 Před 2 lety +2

      In this case it would be manufacturer. From an engineering standpoint you can't assume people are going to know exactly or even close to what 12,000lbs of force is when they are using it. They should have failsafes built in, such as current control or limiters to monitor approximately the rated force. This is 2021. We have the technology readily available and it's better from a companies standpoint to have their equipment protect itself when going over capacity then tear itself apart and then have to replace the units. It was an engineering fail.

    • @hkguitar1984
      @hkguitar1984 Před 2 lety +5

      I suspect a mounting bolt broke first and then continued use/abuse allowed the housing to flex under load and break.

  • @andrewfromm1073
    @andrewfromm1073 Před 2 lety +26

    I’m looking forward to the “I WAS WRONG” caption on the upcoming video 🤣🤣

  • @variableknife4702
    @variableknife4702 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Always amazes me how much equipment people break trying to pull stumps. There's a right way to handle them. Then there's this. Sure - a 3" tree maybe - but that's gotta be 7" or more dia. Also - as some stated the thing's still pretty well rooted. IDK if I would have tried this.

  • @wheelieking71
    @wheelieking71 Před 2 lety +3

    Whole lot more to this story! There are some exceptionally smart people in your comments Cody. Until you show the mount that failed (it was not the winch that failed) this video is worthless. If the threads in the main plates of the winch body (for the mounting bolts) did not strip, and the bolts did not break (which you failed to show) the only possible explanation for this was mount failure. If the threads did fail? Then yes, it was a failure of the winch. If the bolts broke (and you used the supplied hardware) again, put the blame on the winch. Otherwise? It was the mount. If you know so much about winches you should know that the mount is what stops the winch from twisting itself apart.

  • @jcardwell3rd
    @jcardwell3rd Před 2 lety +56

    You still haven't shown what failed... Did you have the bolts tight to prevent distortion? Did your bumper flex? I bet it still works...

    • @larryfisher7056
      @larryfisher7056 Před 2 lety +15

      That was my beef with this...he never did any post mortem to determine failure point.

    • @andrewk8636
      @andrewk8636 Před 2 lety +6

      He also kept using it after it broke and I was still working. He was way past its weight limits and way past its duty cycle and when it broke, the motor side moved upward and the other side stays stationary. The mounting plate bent. If anything this is a testament for me to buy this winch

  • @robspath4203
    @robspath4203 Před 2 lety +28

    The mounting plate is vital to the torsion resistance of most winches. I would guess that it was sufficiently stout, but it could be suspect in this particular failure, maybe?

  • @gregr1672
    @gregr1672 Před 2 lety

    Also to all the people saying Warn would have failed also .I had Warn Winches on all my Railroad Crane Trucks and I used them daily in the heaviest use possible .I pulled railroad cars with the Warn attached to Ford F 550 . I also routinely used it to pull damaged bent twisted rail car end frames and ladders back into shape . The Winch never failed ,it would just stop if it got to hard ,but never broke or smoked .I would not keep pushing it on once it stalled. I would make relief cuts on the damaged steel and then pull again . I had the sane set up on a truck for 7 years straight doing this daily ,using my torches welder and winch to do heavy duty work .The new truck a Ram 5500 crane truck came with another top of the line winch used in towing industry ,A Ramsey ! It was ok but no where near as good as the Warn . It broke mechanically and one if our repair men was able to fix a gear internally ,and it held up well after that .

  • @hairydude978
    @hairydude978 Před 2 lety +1

    Ive pulled quite a few stumps, never have I seen anyone trying to do it like that.

  • @petermccuskey1832
    @petermccuskey1832 Před 2 lety +12

    I have worked off road for over 40 years. I have never ever performed a dead pull on a stump to break some thing like you did.
    Warn is over priced and have owned many on my company trucks, They have broken mainly through abuse just like your video. I switched company trucks over to Mile Marker hydraulic winches for the big ones years ago that work off of the power steering or power take off. To start with your housing mounting must have been weak for the unit to twist. My company has several Harbor Freight winches and they have worked great for the intended job scope placed on them. Please when you do something like this look at the whole picture. I have respected your you tube programs and have enjoyed them. When you make comparisons please do an honest comparison.

  • @svl132
    @svl132 Před 2 lety +18

    I don’t understand how the frame flexed unless the bolts were loose or your bumper bent? Please explain?

    • @ryanschaefer9616
      @ryanschaefer9616 Před 2 lety

      My interpretation is that as force is applied to the winch, the fasteners in the direction of force are not under much tension. But the fasteners toward the cab side are under lots of tension, which probably pulls on 1/4 to 3/8'' steel plate that the bumper is made out of. Granted, theoretically the shear stress is the same between all bolts, but the tension is different. In this case, we can see in the slow motion video that when the cable force is released, the winch frame rebounds toward the cab. This is because the bolts in tension put a lot of stress concentrated at a handful of attach points on the bumper, causing the steel to deform. The magnitude of deformation is dependent on material selection, placement, thickness, etc. The problem with allowing deformation in the mount is that the winch chassis is not designed to resist torsion (twisting force). So what I'm trying to say is that the bolts weren't necessarily loose, but elastic deformation occurred without permanently damaging the mount (there would be no winch rebound if permanent deformation had occurred). This whole response should be taken with a grain of salt because I can only say what I see, and explain what others are thinking was the problem.

  • @EnviousGenome
    @EnviousGenome Před 14 dny

    There was a harbor freight ad on this video 😂

  • @HardcountsAdventures
    @HardcountsAdventures Před 5 měsíci +1

    I'm curious how much force was needed to remove that stump? I would wager the Warn would have failed in the same way.