Mike S
Sponsor - AutoHomeUSA
Tom Sheppard's article - Loading and Lashing: Controlling and organizing cargo for maximum safety and efficiency - in the latest edition of Overland Journal was exemplary. Excellent article, Tom.
He takes on the roof rack in the perspective required IMHO. Because we sell tents that are mounted on roof racks, we have this discussion fairly frequenty, and we are conservative.
Many of us forget that vehicle roof load limits are DYNAMIC limits - we should not ignore what they tell us about handling, braking and other effects of a higher CG in our vehicles. If a Landcruiser (or LR or whatever) has a published weight limit of 165 lbs. with a Thule, Yakima, or other rack system one should heed this specification. Adding more bars increases the strength and distributes weight better, but does NOT increase the carrying capacity. I have seen roof racks that come close to 165 lbs. - before being loaded - loaded with gas cans, firewood, etc. that far exceeds the rated limit.
Next question I ask about roof loading specifications is, "Under what conditions does the spec apply?" Highway? Rock crawling? Pounding down a corduroy road in Baja at 35 mph.? Think about your CG on a sidehill when you drop a wheel. Or 250 lbs. pounding on a couple square inches of rain gutter.
During these discussions I like to apply the deer test - "If you are traveling a paved mountain road and driving a long downhill curve at 50 mph in rain or snow, and a deer jumps into the road, can you control your vehicle while avoiding a potential venison burger event?"
Modern vehicles are engineered to withstand a roll-over and the roofs are strong - but static roof load limits are seldom, if ever, published. I think this is because the manufacturers do not want to encourage overloading. A occupied roof tent? No problem on any vehicle we have fitted so far. But we tell people not to drive around with the tent deployed - let alone occupied.
To quote Tom's article, "Just keep it aerodynamically smooth, keep it low, keep the load light - sleeping bags, that kind of thing."
What are your thoughts? Are you more aggressive, or more conservative?
He takes on the roof rack in the perspective required IMHO. Because we sell tents that are mounted on roof racks, we have this discussion fairly frequenty, and we are conservative.
Many of us forget that vehicle roof load limits are DYNAMIC limits - we should not ignore what they tell us about handling, braking and other effects of a higher CG in our vehicles. If a Landcruiser (or LR or whatever) has a published weight limit of 165 lbs. with a Thule, Yakima, or other rack system one should heed this specification. Adding more bars increases the strength and distributes weight better, but does NOT increase the carrying capacity. I have seen roof racks that come close to 165 lbs. - before being loaded - loaded with gas cans, firewood, etc. that far exceeds the rated limit.
Next question I ask about roof loading specifications is, "Under what conditions does the spec apply?" Highway? Rock crawling? Pounding down a corduroy road in Baja at 35 mph.? Think about your CG on a sidehill when you drop a wheel. Or 250 lbs. pounding on a couple square inches of rain gutter.
During these discussions I like to apply the deer test - "If you are traveling a paved mountain road and driving a long downhill curve at 50 mph in rain or snow, and a deer jumps into the road, can you control your vehicle while avoiding a potential venison burger event?"
Modern vehicles are engineered to withstand a roll-over and the roofs are strong - but static roof load limits are seldom, if ever, published. I think this is because the manufacturers do not want to encourage overloading. A occupied roof tent? No problem on any vehicle we have fitted so far. But we tell people not to drive around with the tent deployed - let alone occupied.
To quote Tom's article, "Just keep it aerodynamically smooth, keep it low, keep the load light - sleeping bags, that kind of thing."
What are your thoughts? Are you more aggressive, or more conservative?