defenderracks.com 9.5' x 5' roof rack, made for a van but works if you extend the stock roof track system. I used Yakima tracks but, after research, found you could just buy additional sections of track from ford which would have matched up nicely.
Roudy
Hi Roudy,
Thanks so much for posting this, it's exactly the type of solution I've been looking for. I too have an Excursion, but with a 5' long rack, and have been wanting to mount a long (> 9') van rack, but hadn't yet figure out an elegant solution to supporting the front of the rack. I had considered simply bolting the front of the rack to the roof with a supporting foot bar, but worried about potential water ingress, as well as considering roll cage tubing that runs from the engine bay up the A-pillar, but that's not that elegant, and potentially runs afoul of obstructing the windscreen laws, if LEO want to get picky ... so your solution of simply extending the roof track system sounds like an elegant solution that would work great for me too.
Any extra info on the additional sections of track from ford that you can share? How does it attach? Does it glue or bolt to the roof? Doesn't the roof slope a little towards the front window? If so, how do you handle that? Just longer length adjustment or height shims on the front support brackets? Any info on the Yakima tracks (e.g. part numbers etc.) in case I can't locate the Ford ones?
At the moment, I have a spare tire up top (as it's 37" so no longer fits in the stock spare tire area inside) that takes up pretty much the whole rack (other than some lighting), but it's a bear to get up & down, as it's high, and the rim & tire combo is heavy (though luckily I haven't needed to so out on a trip). So ideally I would get a rear swing away bumper made, that houses either 2 37" tires (one on each side), or 1 37" tire & some extra gas can/storage ... and then have something like a custom 9-9.5' long version of the Baja EXP rack (http://www.bajarack.com/exp-rack), with a roof top tent on the back 5' & still have 4-4.5' of storage in front. With 4' space in front, I could theoretically store 1 up to 40" tire up top, and one up to 40" tire on a rear bumper rack (as 2 37" tires is a bit wide on a rear bumper) ... or just put 2 100W solar panels, or 1 solar panel & 1 storage box on the front up top, instead of a tire.
I'd really like the capability to take 2 spare tires with me, but haven't found the perfect solution for that yet either ... up on the roof is perfect, 'cos it's out of the way, but it's a bear to get up & down, and also we've already had to reinforce my current Con-Fer rack to avoid it bending under the weight of a large tire ... and also the very top left corner of my front windscreen developed a 2-3" diagonal crack, which I noticed after an offroad trip, so either weight of the rack or flexing of the vehicle offroad caused the front lip of the roof to put too much pressure on the windscreen. Also, most roofs are only built to support about 500 lbs, so I am thinking I'd be pretty close to that already with 2 adults in a RTT (plus weight of rack), so maybe just a light solar panel or two in the front up top might be best, and then use at least 8 (4 per side) support feet for the rack.
Then w.r.t. spare wheels, I'd have to do one of the following:
- carry only 1 spare on rear bumper + tire fixing kit + tire sealant
- carry 1 spare tire on rear bumper normally, and throw a 2nd spare tire inside in rear on rougher trips (but sacrifice some interior room in doing so)
- get a custom rear bumper made that can hold 2 40" tires (1 on each side, but that's pretty close to sticking out on each side, and I may have to add additional lighting on rear bumper and/or roof, 'cos rear tail lights might be obscured from certain angles)
Anyway, I can figure out the spare wheel part later, initially I just want to get the tire up there down, and get a long van rack with a RTT up top, so any info you can give me on how you extended the stock roof rack track system would be much appreciated.
For reference, here's a pic of my Excursion from when the previous owner owned it:
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