T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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104.1 | Do It Yourself! | TORCH::MACINTYRE | Life's great, then u live forever. | Wed Apr 30 1986 14:17 | 26 |
| Gene, I had EXACTLY the same problem. I fish primarily from my
canoe, and often alone. I was doing a number on the roof of the
car, using just the foam holders... I looked around for quite
sometime, but couldn't find what I needed. When I told Greens Marine
what I was looking for, they said that most people end up making
a carrier themselves, which is what I did. The supports that clamp
on to the rain gutters (?), were $29.95 - they are extremely heavy
duty, and are about 6 inched high. They are aluminum, with a whole
in the top (horizontally), so that you just build a wooden frame,
and bolt it to it. Mine works great, stays tight and everything!
I positioned the length wise boards so that the canoe fits between
them snuggly, that way it will NOT sway from side to side.
It's real easy to load the canoe on there, just throw one end up
on the rack - it sits high enough so the canoe will not touch the
car while resting this way - grab the other end of the canoe, swing
it around - it falls snuggly between the legnth wise rails, and
presto! All I use to keep it down are two motorcycle tie-downs,
and it is more secure than anything else I've ever used...
Works great for me... If your ever at MK, I could show you the rack...
good luck,
don mac
|
104.2 | | MSEE::KELLEY | | Wed Apr 30 1986 14:52 | 9 |
|
I have concidered making my own and may end up doing just that.
Mine would be for my Coleman Crawdad boat and I don't believe
it would have the clearance that you mention in loading your
canoe, that is why I am trying to find one of the type I mentioned.
Thanks
Gene
|
104.3 | Clearance | TORCH::MACINTYRE | Life's great, then u live forever. | Wed Apr 30 1986 15:42 | 30 |
| Gene, is the Crawdad the green plastic (abs or whatever) type, w/
the tubular frame? and a wooden rail floor?? If so, could you tell
me how you like it, what it weighs, and how (if at all) you power
it??? I was looking at one of these the other day, and I think it
would be a *much* nicer fishing rig than my canoe, abit more stable,
(the small outboard I picked up is a bit heavy off the side of the
canoe) and I'm pretty sure I could throw it on my rack fairly easily...
As far as the clearance is concerned, that depends on the size
of the rack and the shape of your car, I drive an escort and a celica,
the rack that I made will work for both. If you had a difficult
shape to deal with, you could extend the frame a few inches beyond the
width of your car and a few inches longer than the roof length,
this should provide plenty of clearance for just about anything...
Also, when I said that the supports were 6 inches high, I was a little
short, my wooden frame is about 6 inches off the roof, so the supports
may be 9-10 inches total - this height is what provides alot of
the clearance...
I think I have seen what your talking about, but I didn't run into
one while I was looking, about the only type that I saw was the
regular car top carrier, with the two seperate rails going across
the roof, which would definatley lead too a batterd roof top...
anyway, good luck!
don mac
|
104.4 | | MIGHTY::DILSWORTH | Keith Dilsworth DTN 264-5245 | Wed Apr 30 1986 16:47 | 6 |
| Gene,
The comercial one you are refering to, is sold in the sears boating catalog.
I don't remenber how much, but I remember seeing it.
keith
|
104.5 | THANKS | MSEE::KELLEY | | Thu May 01 1986 10:57 | 21 |
|
RE: .3
Don,
The Crawdad is the boat that you described. I like it a lot. I have
two swivel seats for it, with the backs, real comfortable. It is
real stable and easy to propel in the water. I use a Minn Kota (sp)
on it and have plenty of power to get around. I am sure the outboard
that you have would go on one nicely. I do not know how much it
weighs, but I do know that it is tough as hell to try to moose it
around by yourself...!
The car I want to put it on is a Camero, thus even with the racks
that you describe I think I would have a hard time...
RE: .4
Thanks Keith, I will stop by Sears and check it out...!
|
104.6 | Another by Mail Order | SYSENG::NELSON | | Thu May 01 1986 12:30 | 11 |
| Gander Mountain Catalog:
One-Man Boat Loader $34.99
Deluxe Car Top Carrier Bracket Kit $14.99
The boat loader is of the type you are referring to. The carrier
attaches on top of the car to which the front of the boat is secured.
This might be helpful for comparing prices unless you go the DIY
route.
Steve
|
104.7 | Address | MSEE::KELLEY | | Thu May 01 1986 12:37 | 10 |
|
RE: .6
Steve
Do you have the address handy, just in case I strike out at Sears..?
Thanks
Gene
|
104.8 | Gander Mountain | SYSENG::NELSON | | Thu May 01 1986 13:49 | 14 |
| RE .7 Here it is Gene,
Gander Mountain, Inc.
P.O. Box 248
Wilmot, Wis. 53192
1-800-558-9410 (24 hr. ordering)
1-414-862-2331 (Customer Service Inquiries)
Item Numbers:
One-Man Boat Loader 221 C 9918
Deluxe Car Top Carrier Bracket Kit 221 C 9911
Steve
|
104.9 | OOOPS! | SYSENG::NELSON | | Thu May 01 1986 13:57 | 9 |
| I missed something earlier that could be important concerning
RE .6.
The back end pole attaches to an existing trailer hitch. It also
comes with a hitch extender to use the trailer hitch at the same
time the pole is being used. If you do not already have a trailer
hitch then this would increase the cost considerably.
Oh well... Steve
|
104.10 | | MSEE::KELLEY | | Thu May 01 1986 14:21 | 7 |
|
RE: .8 and .9
Thanks again Steve. I was aware of the need for the trailer hitch...
Gene
|
104.11 | | TORCH::MACINTYRE | Life's great, then u live forever. | Thu May 01 1986 15:32 | 14 |
|
Thanks for the info on the Crawdad, Gene, it looks like a nice little
boat, maybe next year... I happened to see one of those rigs that
your talking about at lunch today, not for sale, on top of a car.
It had a a good sized aluminum row boat on it, looked pretty strong.
I can see where it would work well on a Camaro, it kept the boat
*real* clear of the car. When I mentioned a difficult shape, (talking
about the DIY carrier) the most difficult shape that came to mind,
was a Camaro, I can see why you were concerned with the clearance...
Anyway, looks like you found your source, good luck!
don mac
|
104.12 | GutterLESS car... | TARKIN::GOODY | The answer is ...... 42. | Mon May 02 1988 09:18 | 11 |
|
Is this carrier for a rain-gutterless car?
I'm looking for a cartop carrier for a small aluminum boat
for my Hyundai. (No rain gutters) I've seen something like this
going by on the highway, but never got a good look.
Also, if anyone knows, where do they sell these?
Sears? Kmart?
Thanks for any help,
Mike
|
104.13 | BIG HUNKS of FOAM | JAWS::WIERSUM | The Back Deck Wizard | Mon May 02 1988 10:33 | 12 |
|
One thing you might want to consider for a gutterless car......
When I first got the CRAWDAD, I took the two hunks of styrafoam
and with a knife contoured the foam to match the contour of the
roof. The other side of the foam block matched the contour of the
boat. Then it was just ty it down.
Maybe this will help. Call me if you like and I will go into detail.
TBDW
|
104.14 | | TARKIN::GOODY | The answer is ...... 42. | Mon May 02 1988 11:05 | 7 |
| TBDW,
I'm not sure I follow...are you putting the boat on top of the car
"Right Side Up"?
My boat width is wider than the roof of my car, so if I wanted
to put it on top "upside down" (which is easier for me and the roof)
then the foam wouldn't work. Besides, with a sturdy rack, I can also
load plywood and 2x4's for the home projects.... when I'm not fishing.
|
104.15 | | FEISTY::TOMAS | Joe | Mon May 02 1988 11:27 | 9 |
| Don't they make some car-top carriers with big suction cups? Then, all you
would have to do is tie it down front & rear.
Also, I think TBDW's idea of foam would work if you used 2x3's to span the
width of the boat and simply have the 2x3's rest on the foam. The only
concern I would have is side-to-side movement. Then again, you could always
run a rope across the top and thru open windows.
-HSJ-
|
104.16 | Thats it.. | CGVAX2::HAGERTY | Jack Hagerty KI1X | Mon May 02 1988 11:38 | 6 |
| re: .15
I like the 2X4 idea using the '4-foam block kit'. I have the kit
and used it for a scanoe. It was fairly heavy. Ive seen the kits
selling for under $20 bucks. It consisted of the 4 blocks plus
really nice tie downs. (buckles/bumper hooks/straps)
|