Let's pick the MileMarker 12,000lb electric winch. It has a 5.5hp motor. That's roughly 4100 watts. 4100 watts / 12.6 volts = 325 amps.
Many winches actually start to draw more current than that. Many of the ~5hp winches actually pull over 400amps at their rated load (I've seen a 400amp ammeter get pegged). Some of them approach 500amps just before stalling (going by what I've read on the internet).
Most winch disconnects seem to use the 175amp connectors.
Are these 175amp connectors sufficient? They seem to be pretty standard.
I'm going to be purchasing the wiring aspect of a winch pretty soon. I'd like to use the 175amp connectors because they're standard but I don't need cooked terminals or a voltage drop because of them. I'm going to have to buy 4 connectors as it is (which gets kind of pricey) and I don't really want to buy another 350amp one and a 175amp one to convert so my winch can be used on another vehicle. Depending on how the winch is wired I might have to buy 2 more connectors to swap polarity in case someone else wired differently than me.
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Many winches actually start to draw more current than that. Many of the ~5hp winches actually pull over 400amps at their rated load (I've seen a 400amp ammeter get pegged). Some of them approach 500amps just before stalling (going by what I've read on the internet).
Most winch disconnects seem to use the 175amp connectors.
Are these 175amp connectors sufficient? They seem to be pretty standard.
I'm going to be purchasing the wiring aspect of a winch pretty soon. I'd like to use the 175amp connectors because they're standard but I don't need cooked terminals or a voltage drop because of them. I'm going to have to buy 4 connectors as it is (which gets kind of pricey) and I don't really want to buy another 350amp one and a 175amp one to convert so my winch can be used on another vehicle. Depending on how the winch is wired I might have to buy 2 more connectors to swap polarity in case someone else wired differently than me.