Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate
links, including eBay, Amazon, Skimlinks, and others.
Ok this is exactly the info I was looking for. I had no idea I had to access the winch mount by removing the armor. So I'll have him fab up plates for me. ARB hardware might not work for me since my front end has been chopped and welded for my tow bar brackets. Custom brackets might just be the key here. I'll talk to him about it. Glad I asked you guys cause I was headed down the weld-on path. Duggy, no winch headed for my truck yet. I have more financial fish to fry but I appreciate the heads up. I just couldn't pass up brand new armor for that price, plus the fact that I'm tired of explaining to people what happened to my missing bumper.
Before you do all of this, I know of a winch cradle that would go well with this bumper located in Austin.
If I had to fabricate something (or have something fabricated), I think I'd lean towards building mounts that bolt to the bumper, just like the ARB mounts for the 100 series, but I'd build the frame side of the mounts to slide on and bolt to the frame like the older ARB 80 series mounts
Arb front bumper install question
with the tow bar that you use, I don't think I'd want the usual ARB energy absorbing accordion mounts in there.
I thought I remembered the winch bolting directly to the ARB bumper (feet forward). Why would you need a winch cradle? Are you proposing using the winch cradle as a foundation to build the frame to bumper interface?
I forgot the 2003+ ARB combination bar has different brackets it uses to mount the chassis points. I wish all of the 100 series ARB bumpers mounted like the 80 series do, all 1 solid piece and onto the frame horns. The issue with the 2/3/4/15 piece design is that if you do not drill the pilot hole (which a lot folks dont), the bumper will move off of the chassis brackets if you nudge something. The 1 piece solid design is easier to install, but I understand ARB built in the accordion panels for safety regulations.
View attachment 1439531 Just made a Houston Craigslist score for a brand new ARB front bumper for my truck for $400. Now comes the hard part. I'm having a guy fab/weld it to my frame ends. It didn't come with a hardware kit. Any reason I shouldn't weld it? Is there a reason to bolt it on that would be better than welding? I have no reason to ever remove it. I haven't owned a bumper cover for years due to an accident with my tour bus so I'm comfortable with it being on there permanently unless someone gives me a good argument for NOT welding it. I'll be removing the tow bar and re-attaching it to the front of my ARB. Any advice on this would be super helpful. Truck goes in next week.
View attachment 1439533