doug hodder wrote:If you are doing composite construction...I'd put in a beefy piece of material that will really hold a fastener at those points that you want your brackets to attach to. A side mount type bracket might be best as it would carry the load down the wall to the floor rather than onto the roof. Others opinions may vary. Doug
M C Toyer wrote:shootr wrote:I have one of those hard covers for the truck bed, so I can't use a rack with it.
Gotcha.
I have a Ford Explorer Sport Trac - the bed is only 4 foot long and it has a factory steel hard cover that hinges in the middle so there was no way at all to carry my kayak in the bed. However the cover finish is somewhat like a bed liner and scratch resistant. The cover is strong enough to stand on and my rear window opening is about 32 inches wide so I just put a piece of foam rubber on the cover, slide the kayak partly through the window, and tie it down. The kayak back overhung the bumper about two foot but I had a bike rack mounted to the receiver hitch that is about that far back anyway. Before I built the roof rack for my trailer the kayak was well ckear of it anyway and I can still carry it or an extra the same way, It's the wife's truck, technically, but the cover is too nice and color matched to mess with, and I like being able to lock up gear in it. Plus kids in the back seat, leaving the window open, etc. just isn't a solution for me.
I think that was bobhenry in a recent post that had the extendable pvc awning rack. I like that concept because it looks like the receiver tubes are completely sealed and they mount through the sides so nothing rides on the roof. Taking that concept to my example of a ladder rack
two or three of the roof spars could be tubes that extended slightly past the sides of the trailer and those could be the receivers rather than going all the way to the bottom of the frame. The side walls could be reinforced directly from those spars to the floor / frame with the verticle framing within the composite wall.I haven't given up on this idea either, it is an elegant execution if I can come up with a final design and materials that please me structurally and aesthetically
Do you plan to carry the kayaks flat or on edge with an inverted T brace in the center? Probably flat, as they would be able to sit side by side, and I'd like the rack to stay as vanilla as possible so it can be repurposed depending on the mission, so to speak.
Thinking a step farther if you carry them on edge you could hinge the sides of the rack where the kayaks could be flipped out to permit opening your galley hatch without completely removing them.
Where do you carry the dolly for the kayaks? Is it like the mitey-mites, just a pair of wheels on a small foldup frame that straps to the kayak? I built a tongue for mine out of pvc and made a pvc hoop to replace the straps. I always had a problem with the straps slipping if I pulled by the kayak. With the tongue I pull directly on the wheels so nothing slips. My current kayak is a sit in that I rigged with a battery powered trolling motor My dollies are PVC ones I made from an idea I saw on Instructables, with Harbor Freight balloon tires. They come apart enough to stow in the kayak when transporting, lashed under the ratchet straps. With bicycle grip-tape, they don't slip when wheeling to and fro.
shootr wrote:Sweet!
I take it those numbers (forgive me if the terminology is inaccurate) are the maximum loads the wall can take vertically (in compression) with a load placed atop it and secured to hardpoints embedded inside the wall? With 2000 being if a hardpoint is supported by a vertical solid wood piece from the trailer to the top hardpoint?
God bless engineers!
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