Rear Bike/Gear Rack
Goals for the rear rack are to:
- Hold two mountain bikes...they must not stick out above the roof or past the side walls when driving, and be as high up as possible to reduce the likelihood of damage in a rear end collision. I've been rear ended three separate times in previous vehicles (mostly slow speed in city traffic), and one was a hit and run.
- Hold some maxxtrax.
- Not obstruct access to the rear drawer, or require moving something out of the way for access.
- Not obstruct any of the lights or markers.
- Hold some external portable storage, in this case a trasharoo that we already have.
- Possibly hold the second of two FWC propane tanks, up high to reduce the likelihood of being hit if rear ended.
- Have some support so that the weight is partially distributed onto the flatbed, and some isolation to allow minimal flex/some vibration dampening.
- Least stick out possible when bikes are mounted, yet not require loosening the stem and turning bars.
- Some provision for a cellular booster antenna.
With that in mind we started with the camper corner jacks as the camper connection point, much like the aluminum rack FWC sells. There is a 1/4" thick piece or rubber between the camper side and the rack side to allow minimal flex and some vibration dampening.
At the bottom I sourced some rubber isolated engine mounts fabricator brackets from Ruff Specialties. The proceeded to hole saw and weld square tubing to them for the lower supports. This bracket is attached to the tray. Some additional tabs from Ruff Specialties fabricator parts were added for the bike tray supports. A few tabs added on for holding maxxtrax, and other assorted functions. This is what it looked like at that point.
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Then bike horizontal supports were fabricated, along with measurements for the 1-up bike trays until the two bikes could be as close to the camper as possible, yet avoid banging on the camper as there is some movement in the system.
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We wanted an easy fold/latch in the stowed and carrying positions, so some handles were ordered from Amazon then added in. To drop the trays down, you pull the top handle out for release, and pull the bottom handle out to allow the trays to settle in the carry position where they lock in place. To stow them you only pull the lower handle, and they will automatically click into the locked/stowed position. In practice it works amazingly well.
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We added tabs up top to hold the folding antenna for the cell booster, and a single quick fist to hold it when stowed. We added some heavy diagonal round tubing, which adds some lateral bracing, but is really there for a place that one can secure a cable. The tube diameter is too large for most bolt cutters, so they would have to cut the lock or cable to get the bikes. The plan is to cover them so that they are less visible, and thought to be a beater or commuter vs. something more valuable. Time will tell how that plays out, and there is of course insurance if it doesn't.
Painted for now, with maxxtrax added. Four 1/2-13 all thread sections to secure the maxxtrax, one uses the HiLift jack lockable threaded handle to help keep them secure.
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This bike rides close to the camper when it is just one bike, and if two, this bike is further out. My bars are wider than the wife's, so with two there is a bit more clearance between her bar and the camper.
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Just in case, we ordered this coozie set from Amazon. One can slipped into one bottle version. Since we both use the wider Ergon grips, the zipper works to hold the two nested coozies on, and it provides padding so the bars don't damage the campers spring lift piston while bouncing down a rough road or hitting a g-out.
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All in all it works well. It is easy to load, unload, stow the tray, etc. Access to the maxxtrax is easy, nothing blocks the slide out drawer (you do have to duck under the bikes for unlocking/unlatching the drawer though) or any of the lights. I plan to make a propane tank bracket to fit on the upper left side for when we do bigger trips and want the second tank on hand.