We had a small winch like that in my mothers garage rafters growing up just to winch deer in the air for processing it was handy.
Just ran into this video. Not a bad set-up if it were crafted to fit nicely.Many different ways you could do it. I just thought the way I suggested would allow you to use your winch on the front and go up and over.
I have one of those too that I got years ago. I found that a trailer is not practical for my situation. With my back, I want to drag a deer as short a distance as possible. I can get my UTV with no trailer much closer to deer. Turning a trailer around on a tight trail can be impossible. I can recall disconnecting the trailer and turning around the ATV and then turning around the trailer and then hooking back up years ago. I finally got a deerloader for the ATV which lets me go anywhere the ATV can go. As the ATV got old and started spending too much time in the shop where reliability was a concern, I ended up buying the UTV. I can still ride the ATV, but as I get older, swinging that leg over it is getting tougher and tougher. I figured a UTV is a little less maneuverable but easier for me to use as I get older.I bought a Polar brand two wheel trailer about 20 years ago that we pull with a wheeler or UtV. The plastic tub "bed" can be tilted to the ground and it can be pivoted too. Thus we just drive up to our deer and pull it into the tub....then pivot and rotate the tub back to operating mode and away we go to the buck pole. We then hoist the deer up on the buck pole via a hand winch.....and gut the deer.....with the entrails falling into the tub of the trailer below the deer. When done gutting......we take a five gallon jug of water and a broom along.....to an area we clean out the trailer. Much cleaner and easier doing it this way than in the field......and our blind site isn't full of deer tailings. Really slick and easy.
I took a new hunter out last night and he shot both a doe and about 15 minutes later her fawn came back to her and he shot it. It was a button buck. That gave me an opportunity to test the bed winch with the new fairlead. It worked well. The deer was at a bit of an angle and the issue of the cable wrapping around the end of the spool was gone! Looks like this will be a viable solution for me.Just an update on the bed winch. I've used it on 2 deer now. The first on worked perfectly. The second one winched in, but when I got back, I found the cable was caught between the end of the spool and the bracket wrapped around several times. I could not free it. I ended up having to watch a video to figure out how to tear the winch apart to untangle the cable. I decided that the issue was using the winch without a fairlead. So, I scratched my head to come up with a way to mount one. The best I could figure was to weld a couple bolts directly on the frame of the winch. The first bolt went well. I ground off the side of the hex head and some threading and welded it to the side of the frame. For the second bolt, I had to weld the hex head to non-flat front of the winch. It broke off twice. It looked to me like the weld was not penetrating the winch but it as penetrating the hex head of the bolt. I ended up turning up the welder and the third time was a charm. Because the surface was not flat, there is a slight angle to it, but I think it will be functional.
Here is the welding job:
Here is the finished product with the fairlead attached:
Thanks,
Jack
I used it for the first time at the farm. I did notice lots of rattling and some squeaking when the RPMs go up a bit when driving. I did not push it as it is new. I never went over 10 mph, but I noticed this when I was going up hills.
Here are the pics I promised:
I did wire a connector to the battery and ran it out next to the passenger seat so I can plug it into a trickle charger when no tin use.
I'm now trying to figure out how to pick up deer. I have a GreatDay loader on my ATV that I like, but if the ATV gets fixed, I'll want to keep it on there. They have also gone up considerably in price since I bought mine and you can't even get them with the supply chain issues these days. So, my brain is working on an idea that I can fabricate myself.... Stay tuned, but If folks have alternate suggestions they have used to load deer I'd like to hear them.
Thanks,
Jack
Hey Jack, just wondering, is the Honda loud when you drive it? I have driven many others and they are just so loud to drive on trails, I am not sure how people do it. I am looking for a used UTV, but I want to cruise and relax, and work it hard when I need it. I just haven’t found one I would be able to relax in while cruising down a trail. At least to where the wife and myself could talk, without yelling at each other.
Also, I wanted to ask, do you wish you would have just spent the extra for the electric one? I saw you bought the electric bike, for stealth mode.
The hondas are quieter than most other UTVs but they are not "quiet" by any stretch of the imagination.
I don’t expect them to be silent, but I expected them to be equivalent to an atv, rather then so loud that at 40mph on a trail, it’s not worth bothering to chat with the passenger.
I have two Kawasaki Mule SX SC's. One is 2016, the other a 2019. The '16 is much quieter at all speeds, and especially at idle. I can not for the life of me see why, as the muffler and part numbers are the same. That said, most of my use is under 10 mph, and these units plenty quite for that type work, and I have no issues carrying a conversation. Occasionally I wish they weren't governed at 25 mph, but they have been care-free so far.. . . I rarely got over 10 mph with it. It is certainly not stealthy, but I have no problem carrying on a conversation.
I think Wind Gypsy may be right about the Hondas being quieter than many UTVs, but there are a couple things to consider. First, you pretty much sitting right in front of the engine and it is not sealed off, it just sits under the bed. There is some vibration from the engine. I think it causes rattles and squeaks to make as much noise as the engine itself. There is not a lot of engine noise coming from the exhaust. There are 3rd party silencers for the exhaust, but I think general vibrations and rattles make quieting the exhaust of little benefit.
Considering all the noise, I have no issues carrying on a conversation at 10 mph or so. I don't know what it would be like at 40 mph and don't intend to find out.
I don’t expect them to be silent, but I expected them to be equivalent to an atv, rather then so loud that at 40mph on a trail, it’s not worth bothering to chat with the passenger.