Top Product

FITHOIST 1500 lb Portable Drill Winch with 40 ft Steel Cable

The featured drill-powered winch runs from a standard 18V/20V cordless drill, not included, for portable pulling around trailers, ATVs, UTVs, lawn tractors, and jobsite tasks.

Rated for 1500 lb pulling, it pairs a 40 ft steel cable with a 360 degree swivel hook and included strap / gloves setup for loading, dragging, and lifting tasks where a fixed vehicle winch would be too bulky.

FITHOIST 1500 lb portable drill winch

Practical By Design

FITHOIST is for jobs where moving weight needs to feel controlled, not improvised. The brand keeps the focus on familiar hardware, clear use cases, and practical details that help buyers choose the right tool before the work starts.

FITHOIST Tools for Different Pulling Jobs

FITHOIST 600 lb boat trailer hand winch

FITHOIST 600 lb Boat Trailer Hand Winch

A lighter manual winch makes sense for boat trailers, jet skis, small marine setups, ATVs, and similar pulls where powered lifting would be more than the job needs. The 600 lb rating keeps the role simple: controlled hand-crank pulling for smaller trailer loads.

The 19-20 ft strap gives useful working reach, and the 2-way, 1-speed ratchet supports forward or reverse movement during loading and positioning. It suits buyers who need a compact strap winch for trailer work, not a cable hoist.

FITHOIST 3-in-1 electric hoist winch

FITHOIST 3-in-1 Electric Hoist Winch, 1100 lb

For garages, shops, warehouses, and mounted lifting points, the electric hoist handles jobs where hand cranking is the wrong fit. It runs on 110/120V power, uses a 1500W motor, and is rated for up to 1100 lb with a listed max lifting height of 25 ft.

Control is the main advantage. Manual control, a wired remote, and a wireless remote are all part of the setup, while the limit switch, overload protection, and red/green status indicator give the operator more feedback than a basic puller or hand winch.

FITHOIST 2-ton come-along cable puller

FITHOIST 2-Ton Come-Along Cable Puller

Use the come-along when the job needs heavier manual pull without depending on electric power. It fits vehicle recovery, object positioning, farm work, construction tasks, and other jobs where a portable lever puller is the better tool. The 2-ton / 4,400 lb pulling rating clearly separates it from the smaller boat trailer winch.

It uses a 12 ft steel cable, two hooks, dual gears, and self-closing latch cues for controlled cable pulling. The anti-reverse mechanism is the key detail for gradual tensioning and holding, making this a manual puller rather than a trailer caster or mounted electric hoist.

FITHOIST dual trailer jack wheel

FITHOIST 6 in Dual Trailer Jack Wheel, 2000 lb

This is the trailer movement accessory in the grid, not a winch. It fits trailer tongue jack setups where the trailer needs to roll, pivot, or settle into position before towing or storage.

The dual polymer wheel supports up to 2000 lb, fits 2 in jack tubes, uses a safety pin, and swivels 360 degrees on compatible standard and A-frame trailer jacks. It is most useful at the tongue, especially when a fixed jack foot would make positioning harder.

Find the Right FITHOIST Winch or Hoist

FeatureDrill WinchBoat Trailer Hand WinchElectric Hoist WinchCome-Along Cable Puller
ProductFITHOIST 1500 lb Portable Drill WinchFITHOIST 600 lb Boat Trailer Hand WinchFITHOIST 3-in-1 Electric Hoist WinchFITHOIST 2-Ton Come-Along Cable Puller
Power / operation18V/20V cordless drill, not includedManual hand crank110/120V electric powerManual lever puller
Rated capacity1500 lb600 lb1100 lb2-ton / 4,400 lb
Cable, strap, or reach40 ft steel cable19-20 ft strapUp to 25 ft lifting height12 ft steel cable
Control detail360 degree swivel hook; clutch lock / release knob2-way, 1-speed ratchetManual, wired, and wireless controlsDual gears with anti-reverse mechanism
Practical fitTrailer loading, ATV / UTV work, lawn tractor pulling, draggingBoat trailers, jet skis, marine trailers, smaller trailer pullsGarage, shop, warehouse, and mounted lifting setupsVehicle recovery, object positioning, farm, construction, and home pulling

More Than One Kind of Pulling and Support

Winches and Hoists

When the job is to pull or lift weight, FITHOIST includes drill-powered winches, hand-crank winches, electric hoists, lever chain hoists, pulley systems, and game-hoist setups. These are the tools for controlled force when muscle alone is not enough.

Trailer Hardware and Movement

Trailer jobs often need more than the pulling tool. Wheel chocks, jack wheels, shackles, tire skates, and trailer-ready hardware help with stability, tongue movement, towing setup, and smaller wear or safety parts around the trailer.

Jacks and Lifting Supports

Some jobs are about raising, holding, or stabilizing rather than winching. Scissor jack kits, bottle jack adapters, screw-style house jacks, and related support tools fit temporary lift and height work where the setup needs to stay steady while work happens around it.

Automotive and Marine Service Tools

FITHOIST also includes service tools for repair and maintenance, such as brake caliper tools, electrical connector pliers, fuel-line disconnect tools, bearing pullers, tire bars, and marine fuel-filter parts. These products help with stuck mechanical work without reaching for the wrong tool.

FITHOIST product line overview

What FITHOIST Customers Notice

I like having a pulling tool close by before a trailer, yard, or recovery job turns awkward. The drill-powered winch and manual puller style tools make more sense than trying to muscle everything into place. You still have to watch how the cable feeds, releases, and spools, but the added control makes solo work feel more manageable.

FITHOIST customer

The trailer and hoist pieces work best when I take a minute to set them up right. The hand winch needs a clean strap feed, the electric hoist is easier to use when the remote keeps me clear of the lift, and the trailer wheel is worth checking for fit, pin alignment, and turning before it carries load. Done that way, the work feels steadier.

FITHOIST customer

Common Questions

Which FITHOIST tool fits which kind of pulling job?

For portable pulling with a cordless drill, look at the 1500 lb drill winch with a 40 ft steel cable. For smaller boat, jet ski, and trailer pulls, the 600 lb hand winch is the more direct manual option.

For powered lifting, the 110/120V electric hoist uses a 1500W motor, has an 1100 lb rating, and lists up to 25 ft of lifting height. For heavier manual cable pulling, the 2-ton come-along uses a 12 ft steel cable and lever operation.

Does the portable drill winch include a drill or battery?

No. The portable drill winch runs from a standard 18V/20V cordless drill, and the drill is not included.

Plan to use your own drill and charged battery setup. The winch package does not supply power on its own.

What should I check before using the electric hoist?

Plan for 110/120V power and a secure mounting or fixing point before lifting. The electric hoist includes manual, wired, and wireless control modes, plus limit switch, overload protection, and status indicator cues.

Use manual control when you are working at the hoist, the 23 ft wired controller when you need a tethered position, and the wireless remote, listed up to 328 ft, when distance helps visibility or operator position.

FITHOIST electric hoist control methods

What is the difference between steel cable and strap in these products?

The drill winch and come-along use steel cable for pulling jobs where reach and controlled tension matter. The boat trailer hand winch uses a strap for smaller trailer and marine loading jobs built around a manual crank and strap feed.

With either cable or strap, setup matters. Watch the feed, release, and spooling so the line stays controlled instead of binding or bunching.

How does the boat trailer hand winch ratchet switch work?

The boat trailer hand winch uses a 2-way, 1-speed ratchet. Its switch positions are Upper for releasing, Middle for pulling and releasing only when unloaded, and Lower for pulling.

If the winch is loaded, keep a firm hold on the crank handle before changing the switch position. The winch should also be mounted on a firm, flat surface before use.

FITHOIST boat trailer winch ratchet switch positions

What should I know before releasing cable on the come-along?

The come-along uses pawl and pawl spring controls for cable release and reset. To pull out the wire rope, unlock the pawl spring to release the pawl, flip the handle to the opposite side while holding the trigger, then reset the handle and pawl spring before pulling.

Load release is controlled through the drive pawl spring, so do not treat cable release as a simple free-spool action.

FITHOIST come-along pawl release steps

What should I check before buying the trailer jack wheel?

Check the jack tube size first. The dual trailer jack wheel is listed for 2 in jack tubes, standard trailer jacks, and A-frame jacks, with a 2000 lb load capacity, safety pin, and 360 degree swivel.

Before putting it under load, confirm the fit, pin alignment, caster alignment, and how smoothly the wheel turns on the surface where the trailer will be moved. Keep the nuts and bolts secure, use the safety pin, and do not exceed the specified weight limit.

Are FITHOIST products only for trailers?

No. Trailer loading and trailer movement are major use cases, but supported uses also include ATV / UTV work, lawn tractor pulling, farm tasks, garage or shop lifting, warehouse lifting, construction positioning, vehicle recovery, and general object positioning.

Choose by the job in front of you: drill-powered pulling, hand-crank trailer pulling, mounted electric lifting, manual cable pulling, or trailer tongue movement.