Curosity question really - but - how are winches rated?
The rule of thumb appears to be to use a winch with a load rating of, at a minimum, 1.5 times the gross vehicle weight - so for a 3,800lb truck, you would want a minimum of 5,700lb, so that would translate to an 8,000lb, 8,500lb or 9,000 lb winch, and you'd couple this up with a shackle rated for perhaps 3.25 tons or 7,150 lbs.
Now that shackle rating is safe working load - you can safely use that shackle to LIFT 7,000 lbs - the proof load on that shackle would be roughly double the working load, and the breaking load as much as FIVE times the SWL.
So - how are winches rated - can a winch with an 8,000 lb rating actually lift 8,000 lb?
For example - bolt the winch to the side of a barn, run the line completely off of the drum save for 3~4 turns, over a snatch block and then to a sling attached to the four wheels of the vehicle (as would be used to lift it off of a ship) - and power the winch from a large bank of batteries (to ensure unlimited amperage) - can an 8,000 lb winch lift an 8,000 load?
Let's assume my 3,800 truck is at the bottom of a 1:2 gravel slope, no mud or sand, the problem is a lack of traction, the vehicle is not bogged, and there is none of that "suction" that occurs with a bogged vehicle - can I expect that 8,000 lb winch to pull the truck up that slope?
Last question - are all winches rated the same way?
I've come across a couple of brand new series 70 Toyota Land Crusier troop carriers, 3300kg GVW, and these were equipped with a 2000kg winch - factory fitted - and I have seen them pull seriously bogged vehicles, well over the 2000kg rating, out of the mud, when a section of the road washed away.