PLEASE HELP ME!! Bike Hauling Methods?!

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Today, I left to go get lunch. I have two of my bikes in the back of my truck. I just bought it this February. I set the two bikes in with one bike leaning on each side of the bed, the bars hanging over just a tad. When I checked the bikes, I had to adjust one of them and noticed the seat pan jumped over the edge of the truck bed and put an ugly scratch in my paint, right on the top were my bed cover usually goes. It took it to bare metal. I'm taking it into the Nissan dealer in the morning to have that fixed ASAP.

I have seen people at shows haul bikes in all kinds of ways. My favorite one was at MLC last August. A guy pulled in while I and another CABE member looked on. The guy backing in had a Colorflow, a Huffman, a gorgeous Spaceliner, and some other bike standing upright in his truck bed. He had some kind of a special bike rack in the front of the bed and they all were tied down.

How could I copy that? Does anyone here know what I am talking about? PLEASE help me out here!!!
 
How about making something from scrap wood?
http://www.instructables.com/id/Wood-Bike-Rack/

FX59U08HIGFG4FG.MEDIUM.jpg
 
One simple way is to use a piece of U shaped metal , I bent one out of a old sign. Make it a little wider than the tire . screw (self taping )it to the back of the truck bed (not the bottom of the Bed but the upper part below the window) slide the bike in rear tire first . Then strap it down . Cheep ,easy , & takes up no space !!!


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I keep my trucks forever. My current model is a 2002 Tacoma mini truck I bought new after the 2003 models were out. I plan to use it for 20 more years or until the frame rusts in half. Then my buddy has first dibs on it to use as a plow truck for his snow removal business. He puts in fish plates and welds the frame together, which works for a little while before it breaks again. I have hauled 30 yards of gravel and dirt in it, every load an over load. Having a front end loader dump a half cubic yard of gravel in your bed really puts the scratches in it, not to mention squatting the suspension when it is dumped in. I have also hauled over 50 full pulpwood cords of firewood in it over the years. I have made numerous trips, one 600 miles hauling a double axle car hauler trailer. The truck groans and struggles on the hills. I have never done anything to it bedsides change the oil, tires, battery and muffler. It's kept outside, summer and winter, driven in the salt. I can't recall washing it. No use cleaning the inside as I keep my hunting dogs in there and they have had numerous accidents back there including filling the rear speakers up with barf. I drive through the woods and the brush has scratched it and have had the hood underwater on two occasions as the stream and swamp holes were deeper than anticipated. It's crinkled, a little bent, tail light lenses are busted and patched with bicycle reflectors and Sho Goo, and one running board and all the mud flaps are long gone. Its a truck for goodness sake, its made to haul stuff, not look pretty. Just toss your stuff in there and forget about it, what are you saving it for, the next guy? Of course that may be your intention, reselling it at some point so I can understand your reluctance to beat it. Almost no one wants one of my trucks (or cars) when I am through with it. The last one ended out with red, white, blue, silver and rust junk yard body panels on it after hitting several deer and cars at various times. The interior also had multi colored panels as it caught on fire and they were ripped out to prevent the spread. Different colored junk yard interiors refinished the interior. I sold it to a garage/junk yard that put on matching panels in and out after my son backed into a tree with the door open and mangled it. The person that bought it next promptly went out and killed another deer with it (that was either number 3 or 4). They took it back to the garage/junk yard and they put the red, white, blue and silver rusty panels back on it. I see a similar fate for the Tacoma. The one before the red white and blue one was a 1949 Chevy 3/4 ton pickup that had bungee cords holding the doors shut and a straight pipe exhaust that exited through a hole in the right front fender. The one before that was a short wheelbase Ford Model AA that was missing the cab and truck bed, you sat in a metal chair welded to the frame on a bunch of cushions. I used it for a log skidder for my sawmill. Trucks is for work.
 
I keep my trucks forever. My current model is a 2002 Tacoma mini truck I bought new after the 2003 models were out. I plan to use it for 20 more years or until the frame rusts in half. Then my buddy has first dibs on it to use as a plow truck for his snow removal business. He puts in fish plates and welds the frame together, which works for a little while before it breaks again. I have hauled 30 yards of gravel and dirt in it, every load an over load. Having a front end loader dump a half cubic yard of gravel in your bed really puts the scratches in it, not to mention squatting the suspension when it is dumped in. I have also hauled over 50 full pulpwood cords of firewood in it over the years. I have made numerous trips, one 600 miles hauling a double axle car hauler trailer. The truck groans and struggles on the hills. I have never done anything to it bedsides change the oil, tires, battery and muffler. It's kept outside, summer and winter, driven in the salt. I can't recall washing it. No use cleaning the inside as I keep my hunting dogs in there and they have had numerous accidents back there including filling the rear speakers up with barf. I drive through the woods and the brush has scratched it and have had the hood underwater on two occasions as the stream and swamp holes were deeper than anticipated. It's crinkled, a little bent, tail light lenses are busted and patched with bicycle reflectors and Sho Goo, and one running board and all the mud flaps are long gone. Its a truck for goodness sake, its made to haul stuff, not look pretty. Just toss your stuff in there and forget about it, what are you saving it for, the next guy? Of course that may be your intention, reselling it at some point so I can understand your reluctance to beat it. Almost no one wants one of my trucks (or cars) when I am through with it. The last one ended out with red, white, blue, silver and rust junk yard body panels on it after hitting several deer and cars at various times. The interior also had multi colored panels as it caught on fire and they were ripped out to prevent the spread. Different colored junk yard interiors refinished the interior. I sold it to a garage/junk yard that put on matching panels in and out after my son backed into a tree with the door open and mangled it. The person that bought it next promptly went out and killed another deer with it (that was either number 3 or 4). They took it back to the garage/junk yard and they put the red, white, blue and silver rusty panels back on it. I see a similar fate for the Tacoma. The one before the red white and blue one was a 1949 Chevy 3/4 ton pickup that had bungee cords holding the doors shut and a straight pipe exhaust that exited through a hole in the right front fender. The one before that was a short wheelbase Ford Model AA that was missing the cab and truck bed, you sat in a metal chair welded to the frame on a bunch of cushions. I used it for a log skidder for my sawmill. Trucks is for work.


I can relate to using trucks for so long. My current truck is a 1973 Ford F100, mostly original including the 360 FE engine and C6 3 speed auto transmission. Under 90,000 original miles. I bought it from my mechanic who purchased it from the family that bought it new in 1973 for camping trips with one of those in bed camper units. It still has the original purchase receipt and manual in the glove box. I have had it for many years and have no plans to ever retire it.
 
I can relate to using trucks for so long. My current truck is a 1973 Ford F100, mostly original including the 360 FE engine and C6 3 speed auto transmission. Under 90,000 original miles. I bought it from my mechanic who purchased it from the family that bought it new in 1973 for camping trips with one of those in bed camper units. It still has the original purchase receipt and manual in the glove box. I have had it for many years and have no plans to ever retire it.

Wow, my friend had one of those. He put a stake bed on it, shag carpeting on the doors and a 410 engine in it from a mercury station wagon. It was 4 wheel drive. He called it "Beefy Red Bob". He was a carpenter and that was his work truck. That's one I missed, I should have bought it when he sold it after the front tie rod fell off when he dropped off the dock onto the Sugar Island Ferry. That was before they had hydraulically operated docks that could be raised or lowered to match the St. Mary's River level. The next owner destroyed it by making it into a mud drag racer. The crank shaft broke in two. The 4 speed transmission he used didn't balance the engine and the vibration broke the crank.
 
Here's what I do. I bought some steel rods, slid some clear tubing over them and bent a hook in each of the ends. I then used them to hook around the stems on my bikes and then ratchet tie the bikes to the truck bed. I can use one for two bikes or two for three bikes.

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By leaning the bikes over and putting the tires together the handle bars clear each other. I also tied the excess strapping around the seat posts in these pictures but that was overkill and not at all necessary. I mainly did that to keep the wind from whipping the straps around.

100_4808_zps0a26b3e2.jpg
 
I actually put together a design for a bike rack that fit between the cab and bed of the truck, and was adjustable to fit upto a 4" wheel....put it on quirky.....didn't get too far.
 
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