- First Name
- David
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2021
- Threads
- 10
- Messages
- 338
- Reaction score
- 321
- Location
- Charlottesville
- Vehicle(s)
- 14 Forester, honda Accord Hybrid
- Engine
- 2.5L Hybrid
I paddle a 16' kayak and transport it all over the east coast. My solution was to put a cross bar on the roof to match the bed rack. 10 ' of spacing between bars is much better than the 4' between the bed mount bars. The additional benefit is that the boat can sit forward and not stick out the back so far.
I agree that none of the racks can resist much uplift. If you push up on the bow you can probably rip the rack right off the truck. I'd love it if Ford would provide mounting points for both roof racks and bed racks so you can bolt right down to the unibody. Subaru does it with the Outback.
The only way I found to fasten a bow line is to use the two tow point holes under the front bumper. You would need a hook or chock to go in the holes and fashion a yoke out of webbing to protect the paint. Not very elegant.
A bike and Yak are the perfect way to experience the outdoors. Paddle downstream and bike back up. I did it for 200 miles from the Blue Ridge to the Atlantic in 15 mile segments.
I agree that none of the racks can resist much uplift. If you push up on the bow you can probably rip the rack right off the truck. I'd love it if Ford would provide mounting points for both roof racks and bed racks so you can bolt right down to the unibody. Subaru does it with the Outback.
The only way I found to fasten a bow line is to use the two tow point holes under the front bumper. You would need a hook or chock to go in the holes and fashion a yoke out of webbing to protect the paint. Not very elegant.
A bike and Yak are the perfect way to experience the outdoors. Paddle downstream and bike back up. I did it for 200 miles from the Blue Ridge to the Atlantic in 15 mile segments.
Sponsored