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Trailer winch mount

saabman

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 8, 2009
Messages
594
Location
Sebago Lake, Maine
A while back I purchased a WARN winch and receiver mount kit to allow it to be used on my truck or trailer. I got the same winch that a fellow car club member has front mounted on his GMC truck which I have seen used a number of times. It has a 9000 lb capacity so it should be up to most tasks that I ask of it. I spent a fair amount of time thinking about how to mount the winch on my trailer.

Bolting directly to the deck would defeat the portability aspect of the receiver mount and would not provide a robust mount (wood deck). Adapting an old trailer hitch receiver would have been possible but I did not want to weld to or drill on the trailer frame. My design goal was to make something that was rugged but totally removable. The picture below shows the overall design and fab work.

WinchMount.jpg


The principle design concepts are the a) frame clamp b) riser and c) mount plate and tube. The frame clamp consists of the trapezoidal base plate made of 3/8 inch steel and the sandwich plates. Each of these featuring angles that match the trailer A-Frame. The plate is clamped to the trailer frame via 4 bolts on each side. The winch will primarily exert sheer force on the base plate and this is spread over a large area of the trailer frame. Additionally, the base plate buts to the tubular uprights supporting the trailers retaining fence. The riser features a 1/4 inch stiffener/spacer bar and 2x4 1/8 steel tube. The riser precisely locates the top plate such that the mount tube will pass just above the trailers "lip". Lastly the top plate is made of 1/2 inch plate with a Harbor Freight 18 inch receiver tube welded to it. The riser is bolted to the top plate and to the base plate. All connected hardware is grade 8.

In this picture you can see the receiver tube projecting out ove the trailer deck.

WinchTube.jpg


And here is the money shot showing the WARN winch mounted to the trailer.

Winch.jpg



Next I have to run the heavy duty wire from my aux battery (I run dual batteries for the benefit of my snow plow) to the back of my truck. With a pigtail cord I will be able to use the truck wiring to run the winch on the trucks receiver (when the trailer is not connected) or on the trailer via the new mount. The last item I will put is a nylon scuff plate at the duck tail juunction on the trailer. This will keep the winch cable from being abraded.

Chris
 
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hilld

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Joined
Jan 19, 2010
Messages
867
Location
Vancouver, WA & San Juan Island, WA
Looks good, I would add one addition. As the force/torque is going to want to lift the back of the plate off with the winch pulling, I would add a U-bolt or axle bolt for leaf springs to the middle support on the trailer and have it come up the plate directly below the receiver. Hope that makes sense.

So now that you can pull the dead vehicle onto the trailer, if you ever have to get it off, guess you can always tie a chain to a friends pickup and drive the trailer off with the other end of the chain attached to the car on the trailer.

Looks good.

Derek
 
OP
S

saabman

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 8, 2009
Messages
594
Location
Sebago Lake, Maine
I see your point but in practice the winch will be pulling almost level with the drum, which should put the mount in sheer as the winch tries to move parallel deck towards the back of the trailer. Also, the receiver tube is less than 1/16 of an inch above the vertical lip on the trailer bed (any upward motion of the back of the base plate would cause a downward motion on the tube.) That said, it is a realatively simple mod to drill a couple of additional holes in the bottom plate and add a u-bolt or sanwich plate with conventional bolts.

Chris
 
Last edited:

nissan_crawler

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Joined
Jan 12, 2008
Messages
9,638
Location
Wichita, KS
So now that you can pull the dead vehicle onto the trailer, if you ever have to get it off, guess you can always tie a chain to a friends pickup and drive the trailer off with the other end of the chain attached to the car on the trailer.

Looks good.

Derek

No, you run a chain across the back of the trailer, put a clevis and ****** block on it, and run your winch cable through that and up to the front of the vehicle.
 
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N8

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 2, 2006
Messages
314
Location
In a house
Damn thats a neat idea.
Good timing too as I have been procrastinating on putting a winch on my trailer.
 

ndnchf

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Joined
Jan 9, 2012
Messages
1,556
Location
Fredericksburg, Virginia
I'd like to see the photos too, I'm thinking about adding a winch to my trailer also. But this is a very old thread and the OP has not been on the forum for over 3 months.
 

Bretny

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Joined
Jul 31, 2017
Messages
3,918
Location
Dutchess county NY
On my car trailer i built a 2in reciever about 12in over the deck and ontop of the trailer toungue. I have used it to drag on 32x20ft long fresh cut pine logs so a car even with 3 wheels shouldnt be to much trouble.
 
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