Nice choices. Also gloves and a reminder to throw something like a jacket over the line if you are using hard shackles. And remember the kinetic rope not only cushions the pull but provides way more pulling power because of the rubber band effect. 1 more thing...think and plan (too many people making decisions is terrible) the pull. You don't want to make things worse.
Absolutely correct! Stop, relax, take a deep breath, assess, plan, re-assess, assign one person in charge, and then execute. This is no time to do crazy stuff with hardware that can maim or kill if handled wrong.
I have all that stuff and it was expensive - especially the kinetic rope. But I consider it like insurance which gives me peace of mind in the event everything goes sideways one day.
Nice information but I think a conversational voice tone would be much better...more inviting. Ask yourself this...do you like to listen to a presenter....or would you rather have a one-on-one conversation with someone? Keep up the great work!
I can't find the front recovery brackets you showed, are those for 4Runner? I've got a 21 trd offroad and all i find are way bigger. Also, can you use a pin through the rear receiver as an attachment point for a yank strap? Just getting into occasionally offroading and don't want to get overboard costwise. Thanks for info.
Do you know if those recovery points bolt to existing holes in the front of the 4runner? I need beefier recovery points in the front. I usually use a D ring in the hitch for a rear recovery Thx!!!
@@WanderlostOverland I emailed the company and they said they only fit the rear frame mounting points. Which sucks because I really need front recovery points…