calamari
ArboristSite Operative
I'm 80 years old and have come to the conclusion that there are very few new things in the world, only things that are reinvented. That said I imagine this is used all over but I just hadn't seen it. It's two grab hooks on three links of chain. I apologize if I'm plowing old ground.
I pull my logs with my 4wd pickup like a lot of guys out west. Most of the wood is cut on the national forest or single problem trees on private property. It's surprising how heavy a log you can pull in 4wd low range but often the pulling involves a rope run through one or more snatch blocks to pull the log to the block and if it's set high enough to stack the log too. I use a 14' tow chain that used to only allow me to pull one log at a time because the closest I could put my rope was 4-5' from the log. I'd double the chain back on itself which usually left a doubled chain about that length. It doesn't seem like an issue but surprisingly it was for me. That's when I made this "whatever you call it" to see if it would help get the log closer to the block.
I hooked the chain around the log and then clipped the WYCT to the chain next to the log making a loop in the chain that I ran the rope through. I noticed that left a good length of chain so I choked another log with that end and put the WYCT between the two logs tight to the choker hooks. I could then pull two logs at once and stack them on the pile.
I just bought a 14' 3,300 WLL chain I'm going to cut in half and have two more chokers I can put hooks on and clip them to the big choker and pull 4 logs at once. Now if my back and transfer case can just hold up for 10 or 15 more years, I'll have it knocked.

I pull my logs with my 4wd pickup like a lot of guys out west. Most of the wood is cut on the national forest or single problem trees on private property. It's surprising how heavy a log you can pull in 4wd low range but often the pulling involves a rope run through one or more snatch blocks to pull the log to the block and if it's set high enough to stack the log too. I use a 14' tow chain that used to only allow me to pull one log at a time because the closest I could put my rope was 4-5' from the log. I'd double the chain back on itself which usually left a doubled chain about that length. It doesn't seem like an issue but surprisingly it was for me. That's when I made this "whatever you call it" to see if it would help get the log closer to the block.
I hooked the chain around the log and then clipped the WYCT to the chain next to the log making a loop in the chain that I ran the rope through. I noticed that left a good length of chain so I choked another log with that end and put the WYCT between the two logs tight to the choker hooks. I could then pull two logs at once and stack them on the pile.
I just bought a 14' 3,300 WLL chain I'm going to cut in half and have two more chokers I can put hooks on and clip them to the big choker and pull 4 logs at once. Now if my back and transfer case can just hold up for 10 or 15 more years, I'll have it knocked.
