Trailer Tie Down Points

Energy One

Th3InfamousI

Administrator
Staff member
You saved me the trouble of typing all that :oldthumbsup: A block of wood under the front of the frame (about 1/2 " under the bottom) will allow you to just pull the forks down just a little. The last time I didn't use a block of wood the fork fluid was all over the floor and the seals shot. an expensive lesson to learn.
Based upon how these bikes are designed, your better off blocking the frame, and then tie it down. I have Condors, and even though your pulling forward by different points on the bike, you start to collapse the forks pretty good just to keep it stable. When you block it, it can only collapse the forks so much before the bike is hard down on a wooden block under the frame. Just don't want to put any extra stress on the K9 forks or front hubs/rim. I am probably going to make some sort of scissor platform to slide under the frame before I strap it down. I don't see this being any different than my hard tail dragster.
That's a good idea!

I was just thinking bout this the last time I trailered I was thinking about bringing my MC jack but at the time I was thinking of the big one and it's got wheels which isn't a good idea haha. Not sure why I didnt think of my scissor jack I have for the table lift....



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