Kinetic Rope Selection Guide
Choose the right rope category for your vehicle and recovery situation.
A kinetic recovery rope should not be selected by diameter or breaking strength alone. The correct choice depends on vehicle weight, terrain, recovery resistance, recovery points, rope condition, and user experience.
Educational guide only — always consider vehicle weight, terrain, recovery resistance, recovery points, rope condition, and user experience.
Recovery Rope Categories
TO-GO groups kinetic recovery ropes into simple categories to make selection easier and safer.
Light Vehicles
ATV • UTV • Buggy • Very Light Vehicles
Best for lighter recovery situations. This category should not be used for heavy 4x4 vehicles.
Most 4x4 SUVs
4x4 SUVs • Mid-size Pickups
Suitable for many common off-road vehicles used in sand, gravel, and general off-road terrain.
Heavy 4x4
Full-size Pickups • Loaded Vehicles • Demanding Recoveries
Best for heavier vehicles and more demanding recovery conditions such as deep sand or stronger resistance.
Diameter Range Is Only a Guide
Rope diameter helps indicate the general strength and application range, but it should never be the only selection method.
Tested Breaking Strength Is Not Vehicle Weight Limit
If a rope has a tested breaking strength of 11 tons, this does not mean it is suitable for recovering an 11-ton vehicle. The number represents the force at which the rope may break under controlled test conditions.
Recovery situations create different forces depending on terrain, resistance, stuck depth, angle, speed, attachment points, and rope condition.
Never treat tested breaking strength as the working load or vehicle weight limit.Why Safety Margin Matters
A safety factor is used to create a safer margin between the rope’s tested breaking strength and the expected recovery load.
As a general educational guideline, an approximate 3:1 safety factor is commonly considered when selecting kinetic recovery equipment.
This means the rope’s tested breaking strength should be significantly higher than the expected recovery load.
Approximate safety factor commonly used as an educational guideline for kinetic recovery selection.
Inspect Before Use
Do not use the rope if you notice any of the following signs.
If the rope is damaged or you are unsure about its condition, do not use it.
Quick Knowledge Check
Answer a few safety questions and earn your TO-GO Recovery Aware badge.
1. Should a kinetic rope be selected by breaking strength alone?
A kinetic rope should be selected based on vehicle weight, terrain, recovery resistance, recovery points, and rope condition — not breaking strength alone.
2. Does tested breaking strength mean vehicle weight limit?
Tested breaking strength represents the force at which the rope may break under controlled test conditions. It is not the vehicle weight limit.
3. Which factors affect recovery load?
Recovery load changes depending on vehicle weight, terrain, stuck depth, recovery angle, attachment points, and rope condition.
4. Should a damaged rope be used?
A damaged rope may fail during recovery and can be dangerous. Always inspect before use.