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Affordable Tie Downs!

Cymru
Explorer
Explorer
I am looking for a truck camper and tie downs. I have found a few good campers, but tie downs are way overpriced! Does anyone have good ideas on sourcing affordable tie downs? If it makes a difference, the upcoming camper is going onto my 2005, GMC, 2500, diesel, crew. Thanks!
25 REPLIES 25

Marshfly
Explorer
Explorer
artfd wrote:
"The mounts need to be BOLTED to the frame and you need metal tie downs." Metal ties from an underframe belly bar to the eyebolts on a truck camper -- chain, hooks, eye bolts, turnbuckles, all can be found in hardware stores most anywhere in the USA. http://www.etrailer.com/Accessories-and-Parts/Brophy/TDHP.htmlThis kind of hardware.
--- Finding a belly bar if an old one fails or if you need to fasten a truck camper to a pickup bed ASAP, that is another matter. There was no easy or straight forward way I knew of at the time to fasten a wooden beam to the bottom frame members of a pickup truck bed. The metal belly bar I got came with specially fashioned strong brackets that worked very much like U-bolts to keep the belly bar in position.
--- After I tightened those turnbuckles between my camper and my wooden belly bar for the week that I used wood, I detected no evidence of movement or sliding. For the first 20 miles or so I stopped repeatedly & re-tightened the turnbuckles to take the slack that did develop, until there was no further slack. I grant I did not exceed 55 mph and only drove on smooth roads.


You also didn't get in an accident. I wouldn't have to tie down my camper at all if there wasn't that possibility.

You guys do what you want. I'm going to use mounts that I know beyond a doubt will pull the eyes out of the camper before they so much as bend. My family deserves that as does every other family on the road with me.

artfd
Explorer
Explorer
"The mounts need to be BOLTED to the frame and you need metal tie downs." Metal ties from an underframe belly bar to the eyebolts on a truck camper -- chain, hooks, eye bolts, turnbuckles, all can be found in hardware stores most anywhere in the USA. http://www.etrailer.com/Accessories-and-Parts/Brophy/TDHP.htmlThis kind of hardware.
--- Finding a belly bar if an old one fails or if you need to fasten a truck camper to a pickup bed ASAP, that is another matter. There was no easy or straight forward way I knew of at the time to fasten a wooden beam to the bottom frame members of a pickup truck bed. The metal belly bar I got came with specially fashioned strong brackets that worked very much like U-bolts to keep the belly bar in position.
--- After I tightened those turnbuckles between my camper and my wooden belly bar for the week that I used wood, I detected no evidence of movement or sliding. For the first 20 miles or so I stopped repeatedly & re-tightened the turnbuckles to take the slack that did develop, until there was no further slack. I grant I did not exceed 55 mph and only drove on smooth roads.

Marshfly
Explorer
Explorer
The 4x4 isn't a dumb idea because of its strength. It's more than strong enough. It's a dumb idea because there's no way to rigidly secure it to the truck frame. Mount it with wire or galvanized strapping and that beam will move around every time the suspension flexes, loosening the straps all the while. The mounts need to be BOLTED to the frame and you need metal tie downs. Fabric and rope straps degrade in the sunlight and weaken with dust and grit in the fibers. They also may stretch when wet from rain, loosening as they stretch.

Get the right stuff. Every else on the road deserves for your 3000#+ camper to be secured safely.

artfd
Explorer
Explorer
"...and a 4x4 beam as a tiedown? No. Heck no. No no no. Holding down some dirt, and holding down a bucking, bouncing, bounding camper are two entirely different things. One of them is a good place for a piece of wood, the other is not. We build houses and barns out of wood because they are not going anywhere. It's bad enough most RVs are framed from wood. We don't need to be securing them to the vehicle with even more wood." The amount of bouncing and bounding that would break a 4x4 beam would more likely shatter the connecting points on the camper or the camper framework itself first. It worked fine for me, particularly as a temporary measure.

mkirsch
Nomad II
Nomad II
I have to shake my head. People will spend thousands of dollars, usually TENS of thousands of dollars, on a truck and camper, but balk at a $250 set of tiedowns.

I'm sorry, but get your priorities straight people! The cost of a set of tiedowns is CHUMP CHANGE compared to what you have invested in the rig. PROTECT YOUR INVESTMENT! To hell with safety and other people because I know you're sick of hearing about it. If you protect your investment, safety will come along for the ride.

...and a 4x4 beam as a tiedown? No. Heck no. No no no. Holding down some dirt, and holding down a bucking, bouncing, bounding camper are two entirely different things. One of them is a good place for a piece of wood, the other is not. We build houses and barns out of wood because they are not going anywhere. It's bad enough most RVs are framed from wood. We don't need to be securing them to the vehicle with even more wood.

Think about it though, we are constantly fighting with our RVs as they fall apart from being hammered down the road. All the leaks and subsequent rot are due to the fact that wood is not a good material to build vehicles out of.

Putting 10-ply tires on half ton trucks since aught-four.

artfd
Explorer
Explorer
I bought my steel belly bars in 1983 before pricing became extravagant. By 2010 the end of one had rusted off, where a telescoped section slid inside the main square-cross-section tube. Otherwise they outlived my camper.
For a temporary belly bar, what about this:
A 4"x4" treated lumber beam, long enough to stick out on either side (same way that metal bars do). Drill each end for a 3/8" or 1/2" diameter eye bolt, chain this to the bottom eye bolts of your camper.
This has to be at least as strong as the bottom connection of the camper, & I think would stand up for a long time. But I'm not an engineer.
I used this arrangement for a couple of weeks before my order for metal belly bars came through.
This should work very well in emergency situations, as mentioned here: http://i44.photobucket.com/albums/f29/Jaxom44/Moab%20EJS%202014/IMG_0913.jpg.
You can buy treated lumber beams most anywhere, cut & drill them with simple hand tools, no welding required.
I have not checked prices on these wood beams lately, wouldn't be surprised if they now cost more than metal ones!
Wire the beam to the frame to secure it when the tension is off, or use galvanized pipe strapping.
I later repurposed the beam when I paved my front drive for the first time -- used it as a threshold into the garage, whose floor was a couple of inches below the driveway grade, an error of the original builder I was trying to correct. The treated beam has been in the ground for 14 years & holding strong.

Sturgeon-Phish
Explorer
Explorer
okan-star wrote:
If your hitch has open ends , you can slide 2" x 2" x1/4" box into it and drill a hole thru the hitch and the box , put a pin in it so its removeable, drill a hole in the top on the outer end and hook the turnbuckle to it .
That's a cheap rear setup

Like this


This is what I did on the back and used torklifts on front and they worked real well. Still have the front forklifts for a '96 GMC to get rid of
Jim
2003 GMC 3500 crew dually. Transfer Flow 50g aux tank; ISSPRO gauges, PPE boost valve, air box mods, stock exhaust w/o muffler, Line-X, Pace Edwards bed locker power tonneau. B&W Companion. Pulls a '05 Wildcat 31QBH 5th wheel

zcookiemonstar
Explorer
Explorer
Cymru wrote:
I am looking for a truck camper and tie downs. I have found a few good campers, but tie downs are way overpriced! Does anyone have good ideas on sourcing affordable tie downs? If it makes a difference, the upcoming camper is going onto my 2005, GMC, 2500, diesel, crew. Thanks!



Overpriced? this person must not have any idea of what it costs to design and manufacture anything plus the cost of liability insurance on the products they sell. I had a ladder mfg once tell me that almost half the cost of ladders is liability insurance. This is what happens when so many people start buying products made in other countries that just copy designs pay people a fraction of what this person would work for and don't have to pay anything close to what we have to for safety and environmental standards. Yes even small companies in the USA have to deal with this.

Sorry but this comment just made me mad.

dadwolf2
Explorer
Explorer
Fastbrit,

Those look nice. My son and I got a Hobart welder for a combined Christmas present. My welds don't look like that...yet!!
2005 Dodge Ram 2500 CTD,4X4,NV5600
2014 Adventurer 86FB

805gregg
Explorer
Explorer
Happy jacks are under $180
2003 Dodge Quad Cab 3500 SRW LB Cummins diesel, Banks Six Gun, Banks exhaust, Mag hytec deep trans pan, and Diff cover. Buckstop bumper, Aerotanks 55gal tank, airbags, stableloads Bigwig stabilizer, 2003 Lance 1071 camper, solar and generator

mkirsch
Nomad II
Nomad II
Cymru wrote:
This question will certainly seem redneckish, but why not use ratchet straps?


Truck boxes are not made like they used to be. If you ratchet strap to the truck box itself, you'll tear the box apart and lose the camper on the first hard bump that you didn't see coming.

If you hook to the frame and wrap around the side of the box, the strap will rub and ruin your paint if you're lucky. More likely, the body panel will wrinkle and cave in under the strap.

Putting 10-ply tires on half ton trucks since aught-four.

arto_wa
Explorer
Explorer
I paid $389 for a set of new tl front and rear tie-downs couple of years ago.

With little bit of effort a used set can usually be found for about half of that 😉
99 F350 4x4 CC DRW 7.3L PSD, 97 Bigfoot 2500 10.6
(11,900#)

89 Duckworth 17' Pro 302

Fastbrit
Explorer
Explorer
this is my set up. $55 of steel and beer.


20140223_160216 par steevesdbs, sur Flickr


20140506_064802 par steevesdbs, sur Flickr
1997 Dodge Ram 3500 CTD. Timbrens all around, Bilstein shocks.
2014 Chalet TS116

Jaxom
Explorer
Explorer
Be careful with undersized home made tie downs. I used this belly bar on 3 different campers. It came with the first, used camper I bought. I sweated the last 1500 miles trying to baby it home. It made it but not without issues. No damage thankfully.


Jerry
2015 Jayco Seneca 36FK
2011 Jeep Wrangler Sport 2 door
2011 R & R 20' Aluminum Enclosed Car Hauler
2007 Montrose 16' Aluminum Flatbed ATV Trailer