Recovery points with stock bumper (2 Viewers)

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Super77

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Can someone explain to me how to recover a stock 100 from the front? I see the 60mm pitch threaded holes on the frame members, but if I bolt a hook there it will be above the bottom edge of the bumper, so the bumper will get damaged. I don’t see a good recovery point lower than the bumper edge.

IMG_8214.jpeg


Doing my first off-road trip next month, so I’d rather not try to figure this out in a ditch.
 
Mine had a grill guard and they left the OEM recovery hook still attched under the guard bracket.
 
Plastic bumpers deform elastically. Stock tow hooks work just fine, anyone who says otherwise can either provide proof of their failures or quiet down.
 
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I got these on my 100, they are legit
 
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There should have been one of these on the front.
It’s OEM, and would help in a pinch, but not quite the same as the other recovery points shared.

IMG_9673.jpeg
 
There should have been one of these on the front.
It’s OEM, and would help in a pinch, but not quite the same as the other recovery points shared.

View attachment 3919195
Yeah, that hook looks light it MIGHT extend down just low enough to peek out from under the bumper but mine does not have it. 😕
 
Plastic bumpers deform elastically. Stock tow hooks work just fine, anyone who says otherwise can either provide proof of their failures or quiet down.
Incorrect. Here’s proof:

IMG_8215.jpeg


Recovery mount point in red, bumper mount in blue. It’s a 3” drop from the bottom of the frame rail to the bottom edge of the bumper, and there is nothing flexible in that area.
 
There should have been one of these on the front.
It’s OEM, and would help in a pinch, but not quite the same as the other recovery points shared.

View attachment 3919195
That OEM tow hook is just OK for careful, on-road towing. It could get dangerous in case of a recovery.

(Although, I used it once when the truck was new, after getting stuck in snow, and it held. Stronger than it looks. Two wheels outside the road because the plow-tractor had made a nice flat surface well outside the road surface, with only a deep ditch under. Same plow-man was decent enough to pull me up again. Could have gone OK if the hook broke as the direction of the rope was well below the driver)
 
Incorrect. Here’s proof:

View attachment 3919373

Recovery mount point in red, bumper mount in blue. It’s a 3” drop from the bottom of the frame rail to the bottom edge of the bumper, and there is nothing flexible in that area.
I know what you mean.
I ended up with a pair of the “recovery points” to deal with the stock bumper as well.
With the .25” thickness of the hidden winch mount, and some custom .5” spacers I cut and drilled, it lowered the recovery points .75”, so they just Peek below the stock bumper.
I’m hopeful this will work for recovery being done carefully with the stock bumper.

IMG_9674.jpeg


IMG_9675.jpeg
 
I know what you mean.
I ended up with a pair of the “recovery points” to deal with the stock bumper as well.
With the .25” thickness of the hidden winch mount, ...
That's a very neat winch mount. Is there a build thread?
 
That's a very neat winch mount. Is there a build thread?
No build thread of my own, but a few folks here have installed them.
It’s a Trail Tailor hidden winch mount.
Made very well, very decent instructions, and working great!
TT also makes recovery points.
 
No build thread of my own, but a few folks here have installed them.
It’s a Trail Tailor hidden winch mount.
Made very well, very decent instructions, and working great!
TT also makes recovery points.

Thanks, yes I make steel and aluminum tow points. The aluminum are a bit longer.

 

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