Apr-22-2018 05:36 PM
Apr-25-2018 05:50 PM
Ralph Cramden wrote:
Trailer bumper and frame fear mongering......thats entertainment.
Apr-25-2018 04:11 PM
Ralph Cramden wrote:
Trailer bumper and frame fear mongering......thats entertainment.
Apr-25-2018 03:46 PM
Lynnmor wrote:
Some may think that the frame is some kind of mighty structure and only those things attached need to be improved. Here is a photo of what might happen several feet in front of the load even though only a spare tire was carried on the bumper: Bent frame
Apr-25-2018 06:06 AM
Apr-25-2018 03:14 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:
Personally, unless you are well versed with RV structures and or an structural engineer, folks REALLY should consider the non DIY approach rather than your DIY Eye bolt approach and buy the tongue mounted rack or hitch adapter..
Apr-24-2018 05:51 PM
Gdetrailer wrote:dodge guy wrote:
I wouldnt say its rednecky, rather well thought out. Like I stated its been on the trailer for 10 years no issues. And I have a rear view camera that lets me watch the bikes as well as the road. You can't just drill through the walls without knowing where things are. I do things once. The right way!
Hmm.. OK, don't like "rednecky", then perhaps
Frankensteinish?
Honestly, if I was in the used RV market and saw a trailer with big bolts sticking out of the walls that were never supposed to be there and were never part of the factory build I would be RUNNING as fast as I could away from that trailer.
While I applaud your creativity in trying to find a solution, I don't think it is one for everyone. Requires really finding a "stud" in that wall that is wide enough to accommodate the diameter of said bolt.. RV walls are made with 1x2s and actual size is 3/4 x 1 1/2 IF you are lucky..
That means a 1/4" inch bolt would give you only 1/4" on each side IF you were able to 100% accurately hit that stud in the direct middle AND the stud was straight and plumb AND you also drill it square and plumb..
A long shot at best..
Then you would have to use additional bracing on the inside of the wall like a small steel plate or a huge washer to spread out some of the force.. Failure to do that will result in snapping the wall stud like a twig when you hit a hard bump in the road or tighten the straps too tight (I HAVE hit bumps hard enough to RIP the bathroom mirror right off the wall in the rear of my trailer).
Personally, unless you are well versed with RV structures and or an structural engineer, folks REALLY should consider the non DIY approach rather than your DIY Eye bolt approach and buy the tongue mounted rack or hitch adapter..
It WILL be money well worth spent and you will not harm your trailer or other motorists!
Apr-24-2018 05:00 PM
drsteve wrote:
I bought a new Jayco in 2003, and had the dealer install a bike rack on the rear bumper. I hauled 4 bikes on it for years, all over the place, on all sorts of roads. Never had an issue. No spare tire though, just the bikes.
Would I recommend it? Not without looking at the bumper first.
Apr-24-2018 03:46 PM
Apr-24-2018 02:26 PM
dodge guy wrote:
I wouldnt say its rednecky, rather well thought out. Like I stated its been on the trailer for 10 years no issues. And I have a rear view camera that lets me watch the bikes as well as the road. You can't just drill through the walls without knowing where things are. I do things once. The right way!
Apr-24-2018 08:22 AM
dodge guy wrote:
I carry 4 bikes on the back of my trailer. However I took all the slop
Out of the hitch and carrier. And I have ratchet straps tht cross cross to the back wall of the trailer. The eye bolts go through the wall studs and the horizontal bunk studs. Been doing it this way since 07 with no issues. I also made sure to keep tongue weight in check. If you don’t do anything other than just put the bikes in the rear then you will have problems like this in the photos.
Apr-24-2018 07:24 AM
IAMICHABOD wrote:
One of the things that have been mentioned is the rocking and the damage it can do when the bike carrier or cargo carrier is mounted in a RECEIVER .
You need a good anti rattle device so you don't get so much play in the receiver.
I have tried almost every Anti Rattle device on the market, most have been no good or so complicated and cumbersome that they are useless. Including the Roadmaster type,totally useless.
Until I found the one at Hitch Rider.
Their Hitch Vice is the best and easiest one I have come across and it really works.
Apr-24-2018 07:15 AM
mike-s wrote:
Apr-24-2018 06:59 AM
Apr-24-2018 06:04 AM
camp-n-family wrote:
From experience I would never recommend it. ... We bought one of those bolt on hitches and away we went. There was a lot of play in the receiver and the bikes bounced around a lot. In short time I noticed a couple of cracks in the welds between the bumper and frame. I had a welder beef things up with some brackets and gussets. Before long they too were cracking and the steel bumper was tearing.
...
Apr-24-2018 02:44 AM
mike-s wrote:Ralph Cramden wrote:You're laughing at other people's misfortune? You're an ass.
LOL, those same pictures get posted any time someone mentions bike racks and bumpers here, and at every other forum on the net. The fact is plenty of people haul bikes on trailer bumpers without issue. Sure, some RV manufacturers do a less than stellar job of bumper mounting and you can have an issue with anything,
Lots of people get away with lots of dangerous/unsafe practices, until they don't.
Neither of the photos show any issue with bumper mounting or manufacturing. It's clear that the welds held and the thin wall bumper metal was simply torn away due to the load. It can be done, but requires more than just a bolt on receiver - something other than the bumper needs to take the torsion.