Wonder if I can put a hitch ball on the wall and just hang it from that.
Just a thought u could add a rear bumper simolar to a push bar with some castor roller wheels and make your trailer into a stand up against the wall design.My bike trailer from former two wheelers was a stand up design thet u pushed up close to the wall and out of the way pretty easy for one person.
Mike
I'm contemplating getting a 622 trailer. But lets say in Nevada, you are lucky to fit two cars and a bike in a three car garage. How do you all store this thing?
What's a garage?
Take something like a furniture dolly, pad all the rails and add a vertical back to lean/tie the trailer to. Then tip the trailer on end and roll it against the wall.
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I was gonna try something like a folding bed into the wall idea. The problem is the rear of the trailer. I had thought about having a flat piece of plywood that I would have "wheel stops". The plywood would have hinges to another piece of plywood secured to the floor. I envisioned securing the front part to the plywood, and having some pulley system to pull the front end up and towards the wall.
The other idea was the harness with a lift. I'm not sure my joists would support.
Bottom line is that my FX-35 is sitting out in the driveway and the spyder and trailer are in it's sport.
Chris
In our single car garage we have most everything that is not on a shelf stacked on dollies. So basically everything that is on the ground is also on wheels. We are constantly emptying out the garage to get to something that is on the far wall. :banghead: Our neighbors must think we are nuts.
If I had a trailer I'd fabricate a trailer tip up rack sorta like the this one that I hacked out in a couple of minutes in SolidWorks. The proportions are not correct as I don't have a trailer to measure but you get the idea. Park the trailer on the rack, lock the ball, strap the tires down and stand it up next to the wall... if someone could provide the basic measurements of one I could make a scale model.
View attachment 64192
Yes, I have a fabrication and machine shop...
Enjoy
John
That's basically what I was "trying" to describe although I did not articulate it all that well. I talked about plywood, but metal would be even better. The key though is having something that will stop the tires at a sufficient distance that the rear end of the spyder will not hit what will ultimately be the base of your set up. There would need to be a good 2' (I'm guesstimating). The other thing would be that the portion that ultimately becomes the base will need to rotate. At least I think it would.
Chris
There is no axle, per se, on the RT-622. It uses two coil-overs on short pivot axles. Better and easier to tie down with tire straps or webs.Hooking the trailer hitch to the ball on top would set the location of the trailer on the stand. I think that you could just pick it up and let it sit on the vertical part of the trailer holder, much like you stand anything up. Strapping the axle down would prevent any movement while vertical so the trailer and the trailer holder would be as one. That photo is just a simple depiction of my idea, it would need braces where the tubing changed direction. The rear of the trailer would be in front of the rear of the stand so there is no way you can touch the rear of the trailer as you raise the stand up.
John
this is off the brp site about the trailer would need the ball to center of wheel measurement
- Dry Weight 250 lbs
- Gross Trailer Weight Rating(GVWR) 400 lbs
- Maxium weight on trailer tongue 40 lbs
- Maximum loading capacity 150 lbs
- Overall Length 92.5"
- Overall Width 44.5"
- Overall Heigth 34.6"
- Ground Clearance 6.3"
- Wheel Size 12 x 4 inch
- Tire Pressure 35 psi
an idea is round the pivit spot to mak the lifting of the front easer and when it stands full the weight would keep it slightly tipped back against the wall without touching
the ball attachment in the diagram would defiantly need gusseting and have some means of attaching the wheels to the bottom to keep it firmly on the rack