Martinjmpr
Wiffleball Batter
I was looking at a thread on the Tiregate a few weeks ago, and I thought to myself "if I had a Tiregate, I could stop carrying my spare under the truck. Which would leave that space open for cargo..."
Then I looked at my RotoPax can, which has a hole in the center for a mounting bracket and I thought about this:
Since most vehicles that carry the spare under the rear use a simple chain or cable with a collar, that can then be cranked up or down (usually with the jack handle) somebody should make a plastic, roto-pax style of can with a hole in the center that would mimic the size and shape of a spare tire and would be hoisted up into place using the stock spare tire hanger.
That way, you could put the spare on the tailgate (with a custom bumper or tiregate-type of carrier) or on the roof of your vehicle and use the space that was vacated for extra fuel.
Weight would not be an issue since most spare tires for big SUVs weigh in the neighborhood of 60-80 lbs. Gas weighs about 7 lbs/gallon so there's no reason why you couldn't have up to 10 gallons of gas, which would weigh about the same.
It would be well protected against road damage (if it was made out of the same heavy-duty roto-formed plastic as RotoPax cans) and out-of-sight. It would also be out of the sun which would reduce expansion caused by heat.
When you need gas, get the jack handle out and crank the cans down, fill your tank and crank the empty cans back up.
The only thing I can think of that might be an issue would be trying to fill the tank with weight of a 10 gallon can. Probably two 5 gallon cans that stack on top of each other would be easier to use.
I've heard of people mounting spare gas tanks where the tire used to sit, but the problems with that, IMO, are (a) spare gas tanks are expensive due to the R&D and all the safety and emissions plumbing. Also (b) They would also have to be tailored to each specific vehicle and finally (c) they would have to be installed, plumbed into the existing fuel system, etc.
So is this idea crazy or what? I know there's only a limited number of people who this would appeal to but I think it's an idea that's worth merit.
Then I looked at my RotoPax can, which has a hole in the center for a mounting bracket and I thought about this:
Since most vehicles that carry the spare under the rear use a simple chain or cable with a collar, that can then be cranked up or down (usually with the jack handle) somebody should make a plastic, roto-pax style of can with a hole in the center that would mimic the size and shape of a spare tire and would be hoisted up into place using the stock spare tire hanger.
That way, you could put the spare on the tailgate (with a custom bumper or tiregate-type of carrier) or on the roof of your vehicle and use the space that was vacated for extra fuel.
Weight would not be an issue since most spare tires for big SUVs weigh in the neighborhood of 60-80 lbs. Gas weighs about 7 lbs/gallon so there's no reason why you couldn't have up to 10 gallons of gas, which would weigh about the same.
It would be well protected against road damage (if it was made out of the same heavy-duty roto-formed plastic as RotoPax cans) and out-of-sight. It would also be out of the sun which would reduce expansion caused by heat.
When you need gas, get the jack handle out and crank the cans down, fill your tank and crank the empty cans back up.
The only thing I can think of that might be an issue would be trying to fill the tank with weight of a 10 gallon can. Probably two 5 gallon cans that stack on top of each other would be easier to use.
I've heard of people mounting spare gas tanks where the tire used to sit, but the problems with that, IMO, are (a) spare gas tanks are expensive due to the R&D and all the safety and emissions plumbing. Also (b) They would also have to be tailored to each specific vehicle and finally (c) they would have to be installed, plumbed into the existing fuel system, etc.
So is this idea crazy or what? I know there's only a limited number of people who this would appeal to but I think it's an idea that's worth merit.