Hey Monkeys:
Can you give me your input on my rack design?
As you can see it holds the bike by the rims, pulling down with bungee cords to the third arm. I have been using arm pads to separate my friends bikes from my own so their fork legs and chain stays dont get scratched. I dont use pads between my personal bikes, I dont care if they get scratches and the DJ1 on my hard tail is now scratched on the lower legs, the stanchions are fine though, they dont rub. My Shiver DC isnt worse for the wear, the stanchion guards seem to be doing a good job.
I use a hitch pin lock to hold the rack to the car, and use a kryptonite cable lock to lock the bikes to the rack. No problems with theft so far.
As you can see, the approach angles for your truck are better with this rack than a tray rack design, the empty rack sits higher off the ground than traditional hitch mounted tray racks.
The rack isnt collapsible; it can hold 300 lbs of bikes no problem. The rack weighs about 50 lbs unloaded. Would this be a problem for storage? Would you be scared about people rear-ending you while no bikes are attached? What would your wife think about this big rack riding around on the back of your car? Why wouldnt you buy this rack?
My target price for the rack, which holds 3 bikes with Monster Ts or 4 bikes with 888 or Shiver DC size forks, is $300. From what you can see, is this a significant innovation over a tray rack to make you think of switching the rack you use now?
Are their issues that I havent addressed with this design? What am I forgetting?
Thanks for your input, I appreciate it.
Can you give me your input on my rack design?
As you can see it holds the bike by the rims, pulling down with bungee cords to the third arm. I have been using arm pads to separate my friends bikes from my own so their fork legs and chain stays dont get scratched. I dont use pads between my personal bikes, I dont care if they get scratches and the DJ1 on my hard tail is now scratched on the lower legs, the stanchions are fine though, they dont rub. My Shiver DC isnt worse for the wear, the stanchion guards seem to be doing a good job.
I use a hitch pin lock to hold the rack to the car, and use a kryptonite cable lock to lock the bikes to the rack. No problems with theft so far.
As you can see, the approach angles for your truck are better with this rack than a tray rack design, the empty rack sits higher off the ground than traditional hitch mounted tray racks.
The rack isnt collapsible; it can hold 300 lbs of bikes no problem. The rack weighs about 50 lbs unloaded. Would this be a problem for storage? Would you be scared about people rear-ending you while no bikes are attached? What would your wife think about this big rack riding around on the back of your car? Why wouldnt you buy this rack?
My target price for the rack, which holds 3 bikes with Monster Ts or 4 bikes with 888 or Shiver DC size forks, is $300. From what you can see, is this a significant innovation over a tray rack to make you think of switching the rack you use now?
Are their issues that I havent addressed with this design? What am I forgetting?
Thanks for your input, I appreciate it.
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