The FINAL Rack!: Looking for a rugged, durable & versatile roof rack/basket?

Dirtastic

New member
I've had several roof racks for skis and bikes over the years (Yakima and Thule) and been dismayed over how they age. Steel painted parts inevitably rust.

Any suggestions on the most rugged, durable and versatile roof rack and basket?

Ideally, it would be rust free for THREE decades (either stock or with minimal modification -- such as replacing hardware with stainless)
 
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drewactual

Adventurer
just an aside but somewhat related- I use grade eight hardware attaching my mounting brackets to both the roof of my rig and then the rack itself- but not stainless. I hit them with a shot of clear enamel after installing, and two years later they are absolutely rust free. I wish I could say the same for the steel rack- it is bent 3/4" square tubing, and I only recently capped the exposed ends- there is rust discoloration on the roof of the truck where they've drained.
 

tarditi

Explorer
Aluminum? Titanium? Hot-dipped galvanized parts?

They still might rust from the inside-out if using regular steel... rust never sleeps.
 

Ducky's Dad

Explorer
I have had the same Yakima rack on one truck since about 1999, and Yakima/Con-Ferr on another truck since 2006. I use only stainless steel fasteners, and any parts I fabricate or cobble together from the parts bin are aluminum, galvanized, or brass/bronze. All stainless threaded parts get a coat of antiseize on the threads, all drilled holes are painted and then sealed with silicone, even if they don't need to be waterproof. I pulled the Con-Ferr basket about three years ago and shot it with flat black rattle can paint and it's holding up fine. I have overloaded the Yakima bars on one truck to the point of badly bending them, so the next set of bars will be their HD stuff. I never knew until I called them, but the long bars (80" +/-) have twice the wall thickness of the regular bars and take a special end cap. You just need to cut them to the length you need. If the weathered/cracked plastic coating on the Yak bars bothers you, you can slide a length of black heat shrink over it for a temporary repair. UV protected heat shrink seems to last OK outdoors. I have looked around and have not seen anything I like better than Yakima, especially since I already have a bunch of Yak components and lock cylinders. Been using Yak stuff since about 1977.
 

Dirtastic

New member
I've had the same set of Yak bars on several vehicles for two decades. These certainly meet the (ahem..) "high bar" I've set.

The towers are almost as good. Sadly, the bike racks (standup) flat out suck in the rust department.

Anybody have a shortlist of the most durable roof trays?
 

Ducky's Dad

Explorer
Anybody have a shortlist of the most durable roof trays?
Old Con-Ferrs come up on Craigslist with some regularity, and a lot of those have to be 40 years old and still functional. If I did not have a Con-Ferr, I'd look at the big ARB rack in aluminum.
 

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drewactual

Adventurer
diamondrax... i searched for a long time, and looked non stop for a con-ferr's... which is how I found diamondrax (diamondrax.com)... read up on them and you'll see why :)

I have two racks, actually... one on the cab and one on the cap... this allows flex w/o issues.

for mountain bike upright stands (I am a super Clydesdale and use a thru-hub front and rear exclusively, and don't wanna mess with removing wheels unless I have to) I use heavy PVC... I've used many many racks, and none last like a simple 3" id (I also run fat tires) stretch of PVC split in two down it's axis and attached to the racks... you can use the lever locks (releasable zip ties in two inch widths) to lock them after affixing some nylon strap binders like used to anchor a marine battery. Works like a charm. Black PVC even better... I've seen it done with two split pipes, one chopped into three pieces of length that fit in front and behind each wheel.. it looked to work great and the guy who did it (semi pro rider for elseworth at the time, so swag sponsor products wasn't an issue) swore by it- I would have done it but my bikes tires like mud too much and I didn't like the idea of mud getting in there, and the way I had it worked more than fine.

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drewactual

Adventurer
gorilla glass... :)... and.. thanks for the compliment... that Ram of yours looks dang nice, too... I moved over to (or back to) ford after my last ram- only because of the smoking deal I got on this truck...
 
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Dirtastic

New member
Good tips!

Just bought a 1up stand-up aluminum bike rack. Will work on Fat Bikes, too. Simple and clean. Very secure hold. Supposed to be very durable.

Will try to post a photo of some Yakima tire clamps that weathered poorly (mobile site can't post photos?)
 

Box Rocket

Well-known member
If you have a Toyota, check out Prinsu Design Studio. They make full aluminum racks that are super nice.
 

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