Nice! The only issues I've heard from the Superwinch hubs are the allen head bolts in the "cap" stripping out and then having to be drilled out. I have the Aisins on mine. Always nice to have spare parts lol
Nice! The only issues I've heard from the Superwinch hubs are the allen head bolts in the "cap" stripping out and then having to be drilled out. I have the Aisins on mine. Always nice to have spare parts lol
1999 Isuzu Vehicross-#1209- lots of mods - gone
1995 Honda Passport: Lifted, Locked, 34x10.50's, just a few things..-Click for build thread
I've actually sheared a bolt off in the aisins and had to EZ out it out. I then switched over to allen head capscrews which have a larger area on the head so if the internal hex gets rounded out, you can use visegrips to still remove them. They are also rated for more torque than what comes with the stock Aisins. It's a cheap upgrade I really recommend it, especially for anyone who wheels far from home at all. I'm also in agreement with Aisins being the best choice for a non-fuse system. When I researched my hubs, it was the general consensus that strengthwise aisins were the strongest. However, if you do break one, I seriously doubt aisin is going to have replacements sent out to you for free.......
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable man persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on me.
The problem with the Aisins, as we found out at the last Uwharrie meet, is they have a brass or bronze, internal wear part. If your aisin hub has any play in it, you need to get the rebuild kit from indy4x. As that starts wobbling, it allows play in the CV joint, and then, voila, broken CV shaft as it wobbles around under torque. The rebuild kit is like 70 bucks each. I will stick with my cheap superwinchesBesides, my VX is a trailer queen
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I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them.
Thomas Jefferson
You could say the same things about any lockable hub. The only reason to go with them is what Marlin said about their great parts replacement policy. The bottom line though is that most hub designs have only 1 maybe two moving parts in them, so wear and tear is so low that you would almost never have to replace parts on them. I think in the wheeling community, Aisins are regarded as being pretty bulletproof. Warn and superwinch hubs aren't bad either, just more expensive initially. Most people start out wheeling the cheaper junkyard parts and only upgrade when stuff breaks.