Ultimate Bass Canoe - Attach Tiedowns Monday, April 03, 2006 Before you pop your bass canoe ontop of your car or truck, you need to make sure that it will stay there as you wing down the road at 60mph. I have a Note that the straps pull directly against the center, pulling the canoe down against the foam blocks on the roof. However, it was always a tough job to hoist this 83 pound beast up to the top - not so much from the weight but because it was awkward and unbalanced. At the Bass Pro Shops spring fling, I bought an attachment that fits into the trailer hitch (see other article) and makes it easy to get the canoe onto the roof. The problem is that the orientation of the canoe makes it difficult to tie down using the normal front and back method. The key problem was that the back of the canoe extended beyond the hitch - making the angle of the straps to the rear have to come back towards the truck as opposed to directly pulling against the front. The mount would vibrate and cause the strap to loosen. The challenge was to fix this - so I decided to attach some U bolts into the aluminum strap that runs around the top of the canoe. With these in place, I can maintain the "triangle" stress - and keep the boat firmly on top with the force directed down.
I decided to have one set of the Ubolts facing inward and the other outward based on where I wanted the stress to go. I chose to have the ones over the roof that had the center strap face out and the Ubolts over the bed face in. The outward facing will pull the canoe tight against the roof with the force directed down with a squashing motion. The inward over the bed will tend to pull the sides of the canoe towards each other - putting tension on the strap that will keep it tight. I may adjust that when I see how the canoe reacts to movement. I just discovered that Amazon sells a nice set of tiedown straps - makes the attachment to your car or truck even easier - Tiedown Straps |
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Unless stated otherwise,
this article was authored by Steve Moore Finally, access points may be different or restricted based on changes in property ownership since posting the original article. It is up to you to make sure you are fishing where it is legal.
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