We recently released a set of recovery points to the market, and we had them tested at Nobles on their test sled, with each recovery point bolted to the same section of chassis they would be installed on when sold to the customer.
They were pulled until the point where we wanted them to be WLL rated, and to total destruction. At total destruction, they were still attached to the chassis rail.
Total destruction for one side was over 20 tonne, the other was over 18. We have rated (in a pair) to 6,000kg WLL, based on engineering assessment of the design, materials used, and method of assembly (jig assembly and welding) and attachment to the vehicle.
What our design, engineering assessment and testing can never take into account is if they are used for single side pull, shackles that are not WLL rated, or the nut doing the tow part of the recovery, even though we have a 3x safety factor.
It's worth noting that most "recovery points" are bench tested whilst bolted to a solid mass of steel, so in our opinion this would not have been a valid test, as everyone bolts a recovery point to a chassis!!
We are confident we've done everything in our power to release a product to the market that is safe, and have spent 18 months of design and testing extensively them on our own vehicles as well as bench/sled testing prior to releasing them.
We do not drill any new holes in the chassis, we use crush tubes where required and existing manufacturer holes, and use 15 bolts between the two sides of the vehicle. Captive nuts provided by the manufacturer are prone to failure.
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