jordantii
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Jordan
- Joined
- Dec 12, 2025
- Threads
- 18
- Messages
- 391
- Reaction score
- 360
- Location
- Tampa Bay
- Website
- www.straptacademy.com
- Vehicle(s)
- 2025 RR
- Thread starter
- #31
Cool. I have a kinetic rope and 2 soft shackles righ now. I'll probably get a tow strap as well. Have tire repair kits and a compressor. Looking into tire deflators. The ones I want are out of AUS and the shipping is more than the retail. So maybe the Stauns. Have wood, packing blanket and am assembling some key tools to carry. I don't want to carry shit I don't need. Light weight is important to me.I go the following for recovery:
ARB 4x4 Accessories Snatch Strap 17,500lb ARB705LB ARB705LB
ARB 4x4 Accessories Soft Connect Shackle ARB2018 ARB2018
ARB 4x4 Accessories Recovery Bow Shackle 19mm 4.75T Rated, Pin size 23mm, Type S ARB2014 ARB2014
Bow Shackle on one end, the soft connect on the other, soft connect acts like a fuse, if something is going to exceed the tensile strength, the soft shackle will break before anything else. Throw a towell / blanket / coat on the tow line so it doesn't whip back into your windshield, plus with the soft shackle, it's all rope, no metal to go flying into anyone (better safety).
The raptor empty is about 5,300 lbs, so the ARB snatch strap and soft shackle are rated at about 3x vehicle weight unless you're pulling someone out with a really heavy rig (like an overlanding F-150 Raptor on 37's with 1k lbs of gear / passengers).
As others have said, basics, shovel is lightweight and very helpful to just use stuff you find around you like stacking rocks under a stuck tire, could lift the truck up a bit with a scissors jack, then put some rocks under the tire(s) for traction.
Lighter weight is better, vehicle is more maneuverable, less likely to sink down in soft terrain and easier to pull out than something super over loaded. Plus, the Raptor's bread and butter isn't level 10 hard core rock crawling trails, it's high speed in the desert, dirt roads, sand dunes or even prepped tracks etc. Everyone has different uses, but I'm keeping mind more performance oriented than hard core 4x4, the most I'll do is probably level 5 or 6 trails, something a stock RR could do and that's the vast majority of trails, 1-5 (out of 10) difficulty rating.
Also a block of wood for the jack base is a good idea, especially in soft terrain. Tire inflation / deflation is another good area to spend money on to get something that works well and is reliable. I also really like the idea of tire repair kit as an option to avoid changing to the spare until you can get on-road, if that gets you somewhere easier and safer to jack up the truck (flat, level and hard terrain), I'd do the repair, get to safer area, then swap out the damaged tire for the spare.
I got Method 705's and did all 5 wheels, so my spare is a 705 since they have different weight / off-set than factory and I wanted proper on-road handling just in case I needed to drive a good distance to get back home on the spare.
I don't have any yet, but plan to eventually get some, traction boards are good for loose terrain (sand, gravel, mud with a rocky bottom). They are lightweight too. For securing said items, I'm putting in L-Track system in the bed (4x 4-foot rails), so most of this stuff can be secured with a very light weight system with straps.
48" Aluminum L-Track | Black Anodized Finish
Those 4 foot strips are only 1.5lbs of added weight, so 6lbs + some screws, you can strap in anything, plastic totes from Home Depot, tractions boards, 5 gallon marine style lay-down gas tanks, shovels etc. I think that's the way to go vs. all these bulky racks etc. that add 150~200 lbs not even counting the gear itself and cost thousands of dollars, so air-craft style L-track + factory tie downs will do a LOT for you, cheaply and at almost zero weight penalty. Plus, the L-track is very utilitarian for Home Depot runs or even strapping big duffle bags, tents and other things in bed for practical uses like home repair or just taking the family to a campground.
Weight adds up super-fast, so be systematic and take the "race car / cargo plane approach", IS THE WEIGHT really worth the pull? 95% of the time, a recovery strap and a buddy will do the job, other 4.9% of the time, a shovel, traction boards or spare tire / patch kit will do the trick. And 0.1% you might need a winch or high lift jack if your solo on a level 7-10 trail, but I'm not doing that, so just not worth the cost in performance / literal cost for me personally or most people. Plus, you can end up in a situation where there's nothing to attach the winch too!
Sometimes, less is actually more.
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