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riven1950's avatar
riven1950
Explorer
Oct 02, 2018

anyone carrying 12' kayaks with 5th wheel

We are looking at a F250 CC 6'8" bed. Wondering if folks are carrying kayaks with this set up and pulling a fifth wheel?

Can you do it with Thule roof racks alone or would you need a goal post type support on the front of the truck?

If we order a truck it could be 8' bed but we are thinking we would prefer the 6'8" for parking etc.

We have been using a single Thule roof rack and a Yakima rack over the bed with our TT but obviously this will not work with a fifth wheel.

thanks
  • riven1950 wrote:

    Thanks for that. Looks like one solution but man that would be tough loading and unloading I would think. My fishing kayak is 48lbs and my buddies is 62lbs empty, not the real lightweight sit in kayaks.


    I'm not a kayak guy, but I wondered the same thing. I did not get to see him launch. Those are Hobie Mirage Outback, which the current model is said to weigh 99#.
  • We carried 2 10ft kayaks on Thule Roof Racks on roof of our F250. If the weather got bad-we could put the kayaks inside the 5'vr--1 over the booth dinette/couch area and 1 over the camper queen bed. The racks and mounts worked great.
  • bpounds wrote:

    These are 12' kayaks, and they are the Hobie fishing model with pedal paddles. Owner says this is his second fiver with this type of rack, and that he has not had any issues. This was about a 30' fiver.



    Thanks for that. Looks like one solution but man that would be tough loading and unloading I would think. My fishing kayak is 48lbs and my buddies is 62lbs empty, not the real lightweight sit in kayaks. Can't imagine getting mine up and down would be very easy.

    On second look it does appear they have some sort of roller system bar on the back which would help, but still a long haul.
  • Get a 350. After that its personal preference. Personaly I like the extra two feet of cargo space a long bed gives me.
    Carrying a boat? You will likely want to put a frame up front to support the boat. Trying to straddle 12 feet with semi equal hang over on both ends probably wont work like you said with a fiver.
  • The subject of kayak racks comes up regularly around here, so last week when I saw someone in our campground with a nice solution, I shot some photos and spoke with the owner. Unfortunately these were home fabricated, not a purchased solution, so you would have some homework to do. But I have seen similar things on camper shells, so you might be able to purchase some portion off the shelf.

    These are 12' kayaks, and they are the Hobie fishing model with pedal paddles. Owner says this is his second fiver with this type of rack, and that he has not had any issues. This was about a 30' fiver.

    The brackets are bolted into the top frame rail. You can see the row of 3 lag bolts just below the drip rail. The lower screws are not into wall structure, so they don't support a lot, but they do add a little torsional resistance.



    There is a spacer about 1/2" thick, plus a little joggle bends in the plate, so that it clears the drip rail.


    At the very rear, he has a roller spanning across, so that he can slide the kayaks up from the rear without dragging them on the fiver body. Takes 2 people ideally to get them up there, but his wife was all the help he needed, so it didn't seem like a heavy lift.


    The gentleman happened to be a Hobie rep and was on the Hobie fishing team.