Nyparrothead
New member
Hi All
well I loaded the F3s up on the trailer ( i have an Aluma TK1) strapped her down and hit the road from NY to NW Iowa, about 1400 mi. I tied down from the front rims ( kris cross ) with sheep skin soft straps in the front . In the back I again went from the rim with soft straps (did same spoke in each direction to equalize pressure) out to the sides and back on each side. lastly (cause I'm anal) i went from the swing arm back to a tie down....
i know now some said that using the tires as an attachment point would screw things up and you may be right if you really tighten the hell out of it but look at the forces the tires and front end takes when you hit any size hole or bump at speed.... The bike is engineered for these forces.
the bike did not move the entire trip and I only had to snug things up a couple times as the straps were new.
the only issue I had was I had to shallow out the ramp as much as possible because the skid plate we added lowered the front end and sticks out a couple inches....
mark
well I loaded the F3s up on the trailer ( i have an Aluma TK1) strapped her down and hit the road from NY to NW Iowa, about 1400 mi. I tied down from the front rims ( kris cross ) with sheep skin soft straps in the front . In the back I again went from the rim with soft straps (did same spoke in each direction to equalize pressure) out to the sides and back on each side. lastly (cause I'm anal) i went from the swing arm back to a tie down....
i know now some said that using the tires as an attachment point would screw things up and you may be right if you really tighten the hell out of it but look at the forces the tires and front end takes when you hit any size hole or bump at speed.... The bike is engineered for these forces.
the bike did not move the entire trip and I only had to snug things up a couple times as the straps were new.
the only issue I had was I had to shallow out the ramp as much as possible because the skid plate we added lowered the front end and sticks out a couple inches....
mark