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'84 Dodge W250 Winch Mounting

Lonerock

Member
Joined
Nov 5, 2016
Messages
7
Location
Tennessee
I have an 1984 Dodge W250 4WD farm truck and I am interested in buying an electric winch for the thing. I checked out the better offering from superwinch and the price for a 9500# is around $700.00. the bad is the $175.00 they want for the mounting plate, which looks very simple. I am not real interested in looks I just want function and affordability. I welcome any ideas on winch mounting and mount fabrication. I had thought about replacing the rusty bumper with a piece of 8" channel steel and maybe mount from that.
 

Hobbytime

Senior Member
Joined
Sep 21, 2016
Messages
709
Location
usa
Last edited:

Ronsii

Senior Member
Joined
Jun 26, 2011
Messages
3,464
Location
Western Washington
Occupation
s/e Heavy equipment operator
The mounting plates usually just give you offset holes so the holes on the winch that would be hard to get at when mounting direct to a bumper... but with a piece of channel it would be easier... as long as your holes weren't too far apart on the superwinch(vertically) for the ~6 inch opening on the rear of the channel. Does the superwinch list it's mounting dimensions? I'm just guessing, but 8 inch might not be big enough.


EDIT: Like hobby says HF winches are a lot cheaper... however I think it would depend on what your plan is for usage... now and then farm type work or jobsite (has to work when you need it most!)
 
Last edited:

DIYDAVE

Senior Member
Joined
Feb 18, 2007
Messages
2,424
Location
MD
go to a junkyard and get you a reese hitch, that fits the frame width of your truck. Bolt it up front,(you will have to drill the frame) and make a receiver tube adapter plate, to plug the winch into the reese hitch. That way, you can mount the winch in seconds, on the front or on the back, if you have a reese hitch, there. And you can dismount it, and keep it away from thieves, by putting it in the cab...:idea
 

hetkind

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 3, 2015
Messages
472
Location
Unicoi, TN
Years ago, I put a front bumper on a 85 Land Cruiser FJ60, 5" schedule 40 pipe, on 8" standoffs, put a winch plate of 1/4" A36 structural steel across the standoffs and it worked great for about a decade.

Howard
 

old-iron-habit

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 22, 2012
Messages
4,233
Location
Moose Lake, MN
Occupation
Retired Cons't. Supt./Hospitals
go to a junkyard and get you a reese hitch, that fits the frame width of your truck. Bolt it up front,(you will have to drill the frame) and make a receiver tube adapter plate, to plug the winch into the reese hitch. That way, you can mount the winch in seconds, on the front or on the back, if you have a reese hitch, there. And you can dismount it, and keep it away from thieves, by putting it in the cab...:idea

Thats what I did. I use 400 amp welding cable connectors to connect to the batteries. I carry a couple sections of good welding lead extensions But use the winch on the front without them. I use it on the back reciever, and on my reciever equipped trailers using the welding cable extensions. I use 2-0 cable and have no noticable power loss thru the extension leads. I have 3 parted the line and easily loaded a dead D4 Cat onto my gooseneck with my 25 year old 8,000 lb Warn winch.
 
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