DieselBoy wrote:xj wrote:wopass wrote:yes you are absolutly right mate...but is there a SWL on your snatch strap ?
ive just been for a look on the ones i have here and it clearly states
COOKS SNATCHMASTER RECOVERY STRAP HIGH ELONGATION 8000KG BREAKING LOAD.....
no SWL

aha.... but mine has a "rating"... where did that figure come from. Your "breaking load" may divide back to a "rating" of ohhhh.... 2500kgh (ono - 2666kg with a safety factor of 3 - seems a bit close to be coincidence doesnt it?)
So what your saying is that seeing as we know the breaking load of the strap (8000lbs) and using what ever equation is used to calclulate a SWL rating, you can work out the SWL for the strap.
Makes sense to me. So how do you work out the SWL exactly??
Sorry, thought i'd covered that. break it, measure the kg needed to break it, divide it by 3. or whatever it is your testing to its pre designated safety factor.
back to the plank scenario....... impact force break it, measure that force. weight break it, measure that weight.... etc etc. im not a physics expert..... so idont know HOW they come to these formulaes, just that they do. Ill have to go back to my reference material to see what wire rope is tested to ( i think 9mm, 7 strand is 6), but for instance and acrow prop has weight loaded on it until it collapses, norm is around ten ton. Hence a max load rating of 3300kg = safety factor of 3 also. It will take more, but thats what the safety factor is for.
If bennys snatch has a breaking load of 8000kg, and if the safety factor is 3 (three, and multiples of, are a recurring theme for some reason) it divides down to a "RATING" of 2666, or quite possible down rated further to 2500kg. SWL's relate to anything which has a downward weight placed on it, so to be 100% technical about it, a snatch strap wont have a SWL per se.