Did you have any trouble drilling through the hooks? I thought they were hardened.
The safety police are going to loose their minds...
Good idea and I would do it...
Cheap Chinese junk with good name attached.... Mild steel, drop forged at best .... Not hardened....
Dale
latching grab hook
Bruce
I've never had a grab hook that wouldn't stay hooked? Usually the load, or just gravity, keeps it tight. A case of chain going slack and tight repeatedly?
My biggest problem is slide hooks, especially when you've climbed a tree, at the risk of life and limb, to put a cable around it so you can pull it over, then cable falls off as soon as you've climbed down and put some tension on it! Then you get to climb up again! Grrr!
One day I'll be smart enough to replace it with a hook that has a built in snap on it. I'm more likely to go the baling twine route too. I'd probably wouldn't drill it though.
All my experiences with latching hooks have been the latch assembly gets bent up and become worthless and latch assembly has to be removed or constantly repaired... Your experiences may be different...
Dale

The safety police are going to loose their minds...
Good idea and I would do it...
Quick links work great.
View attachment 565749
The 'safety police' will not lose their minds... they will applaud it!
It's called Mousing (there is even specific mousing wire available). A standard practice on hooks and shackles to securing the load into the device.
Used it in the Navy, especially during jackstay, kingpost, helicopter and RAS transfers.
After getting off tractor at least 3 time per lift I go tired of hooks that won't stay hooked....
Small hole drilled, a little "bailing wire".... Sometimes its the simple things....
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Dale