Herbie
Rendezvous Conspirator
Since I've been unable to find the roof cargo box of my dreams (short length-wise, wide, low-profile, rear-opening), I'm still running a roof basket. (Currently the Surco 45x55x5 model)
I rarely have any of my stuff come more than a few inches over the top of the basket, but nevertheless feel compelled to properly secure the load. When I was using a Yakima Load Warrior, I used the Yakima bungee net, but I really didn't like it, as the double-sided hooks tended to catch on everything, so keeping the net sorted out while you added/removed stuff from the basket was a pain. For a while, I skipped the net and just used a couple of Harbor Freight ratchet straps that I "wove" over the stuff. That worked for big items, but felt "iffy" when the basket had a lot of small stuff in it. When I switched to the Surco basket, I repurposed a Safari Straps cargo net that I'd previously purchased for in-cabin storage when I was carrying a lot of heavy stuff above the bed (now below).
The problem now is that after a little more than two years of use (and really only maybe a dozen weekends in the sun), I can feel that the webbing on the Safari Straps net is started to get that crispy "uv damaged" feeling that comes just before I start breaking straps. I'm pretty disappointed in the durability of that piece, given how much it cost, but it also wasn't 100% perfect in terms of fit or convenience to access stuff in the basket.
So, those of you who have baskets - how do you secure the load? Since I'm pretty sure the cargo net will fail soon, and (not wanting to have it fail mid-trip), I'm revisiting my options. Should I just get a couple of low-ish profile boxes and bolt them to the basket (or crossbars)? Should I try again to locate a low-profile roof box? Is there a more durable cargo netting solution? Or should I just go back to weaving cheap Harbor Freight ratchet straps over everything and replacing them every year or two?
I rarely have any of my stuff come more than a few inches over the top of the basket, but nevertheless feel compelled to properly secure the load. When I was using a Yakima Load Warrior, I used the Yakima bungee net, but I really didn't like it, as the double-sided hooks tended to catch on everything, so keeping the net sorted out while you added/removed stuff from the basket was a pain. For a while, I skipped the net and just used a couple of Harbor Freight ratchet straps that I "wove" over the stuff. That worked for big items, but felt "iffy" when the basket had a lot of small stuff in it. When I switched to the Surco basket, I repurposed a Safari Straps cargo net that I'd previously purchased for in-cabin storage when I was carrying a lot of heavy stuff above the bed (now below).
The problem now is that after a little more than two years of use (and really only maybe a dozen weekends in the sun), I can feel that the webbing on the Safari Straps net is started to get that crispy "uv damaged" feeling that comes just before I start breaking straps. I'm pretty disappointed in the durability of that piece, given how much it cost, but it also wasn't 100% perfect in terms of fit or convenience to access stuff in the basket.
So, those of you who have baskets - how do you secure the load? Since I'm pretty sure the cargo net will fail soon, and (not wanting to have it fail mid-trip), I'm revisiting my options. Should I just get a couple of low-ish profile boxes and bolt them to the basket (or crossbars)? Should I try again to locate a low-profile roof box? Is there a more durable cargo netting solution? Or should I just go back to weaving cheap Harbor Freight ratchet straps over everything and replacing them every year or two?