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Detail Installation Instructions from
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By: TonyD ATV Source
Magazine
Gorilla Winch Installation

Winch mounted on our Suzuki Vinson |
1. Mount the winch to the front of the
ATV using a mounting plate designed for your
ATV. The Gorilla winch comes with a generic
mounting plate, but that plate wouldn’t
mount to my bike so I ordered a mounting
plate for my Vinson. The Gorilla winch
mounted to the mounting plate with 4 screws.
I used Loctite on all 4 screws. Once the
winch is mounted to the plate, you need to
put the winch in place. I had to remove the
lower front plastic, so I could place the
winch onto the bike. Once the winch is in
place, the mounting plate gets screwed to
the frame using 4 screws. I again used
Loctite on all 4 screws. The roller fairlead
is mounted to the front of the plate with 4
screws, also with Loctite. All mounting
hardware was provided.

Winch wires covered in liquid
electrical tape (2-3 coats) ensure a
good connection even in very wet
conditions. |
2. Connect the wires to the winch. On the
Suzuki Vinson, the 6-gauge wires are already
there for a winch. So just connect them
according to the winch installation
instructions. Here's where I used liquid
electrical tape (2-3 coats). I found the
liquid electrical tape at Home Depot. Once
the liquid electrical tape has completely
dried, slip the boots over the terminals.

Contactor/relay switch |
3. Mounting the contactor. On the Suzuki
Vinson they ran the 6-gauge wires under the
seat and placed them on top of the rear
storage box. I pulled the cable back a
little bit and reran the cable up through an
opening between the battery and the box for
the air filter. I removed the tool kit and
used that spot for the contactor/relay.

Connection for the keyed hot wire. |
4. Connect the two wires that come from
the winch to the proper terminals on the
contactor relay. Mine happened to be blue &
yellow wires. The nuts on my contactor were
color-coded. It was also noted in the
instructions on which ones to use. Look at
the image on the right.
5. Connect the red and black wires to the
proper terminals on the contactor relay.
Again the nuts on my contactor were
color-coded. Do not connect to battery at
this time. It was also noted in the
instructions which ones to use.

Handlebar switch to control the
winch |
6. Choose a spot on your handlebar where
you would be comfortable with the handlebar
switch. I decided to slide mine down on the
bar a little bit. Fish the switch wires down
through the tunnel where the rest of the
handlebar wires go and back to the contactor
unit. I followed the preinstalled winch
wiring, and also you want to leave enough
slack so that you can turn the handlebars
fully in both directions. You also need to
tap the red wire into another wire that gets
voltage only when the key is on. No thanks
to my dealer who would not tell which wire
they use to tap into, I found an orange wire
on top of the rear storage box that has a
bullet connector on the end while poking
around using a test light. The red wire on
the bike only ran about half way down on the
bike. So I spliced another wire onto it and
ran it back to the orange wire with the
bullet connector. I twisted the wire on the
red wire side using a wire nut and
electrical tape. I then added a female
connector on the other end of the wire and
connected that wire to the orange wire.
7. Connect the red and black cables to
the battery. Now, since I didn’t place my
relay under the seat, I had some excess
cable that I just looped around to take up
the slack.
The winch is ready for use. The biggest
pain was looking for that keyed hot wire but
other than that, installing a winch is not
that hard a task.