Tying Down Bike on Trailer advice.
- SoundGuy
- KSRC Contributor
- Posts: 1719
- Joined: Wed Aug 22, 2007 1:22 pm
- Bike: ZX10R
- State: New South Wales
- Location: Sydney
Tying Down Bike on Trailer advice.
As I've mentioned in another post, I'll be putting the bike on a mates 3 bike trailer and driving down to Pi for a track day next month.
I'm looking for some advice on whats the best way to tie the front down, for such a long period of time, without damaging the forks seals.
I'm estimating that the bikes will the tied to the trailer for more than 12hrs.
Cheers
I'm looking for some advice on whats the best way to tie the front down, for such a long period of time, without damaging the forks seals.
I'm estimating that the bikes will the tied to the trailer for more than 12hrs.
Cheers
http://www.myspace.com/9planetsmusic" target="_blank
- Smitty
- VIP MEMBER
- Posts: 10910
- Joined: Wed Apr 21, 2004 1:59 pm
- Bike: ZX12R
- State: Victoria
- Location: 3rd rock from the Sun
- Contact:
Re: Tying Down Bike on Trailer advice.
general consensus..monkey straps seem to be the best
GOTTA LUV the 12R!!
- Neka79
- Extreme Post Whore :-)
- Posts: 13115
- Joined: Fri Apr 23, 2004 12:20 am
- Bike: Z900
- State: South Australia
- Location: Adelaide......nah its cool..no really!!
- Contact:
Re: Tying Down Bike on Trailer advice.
dont fully comp the front susp when u tie it down...u dont want too much movement, but u dont wanna pop seals...
keeping in mind that that tyre down system uses only a rear tyre, i ussually tie down the back as well (from rear footpegs or sumthin) which mean with 4 tie down points, u dont have to comp all ur susp so much...
thats how i do it anyway...
keeping in mind that that tyre down system uses only a rear tyre, i ussually tie down the back as well (from rear footpegs or sumthin) which mean with 4 tie down points, u dont have to comp all ur susp so much...
thats how i do it anyway...
Neka
2006 Zeddy 1000
1996 VS series 2 S pak Ute

2006 Zeddy 1000
1996 VS series 2 S pak Ute

- SoundGuy
- KSRC Contributor
- Posts: 1719
- Joined: Wed Aug 22, 2007 1:22 pm
- Bike: ZX10R
- State: New South Wales
- Location: Sydney
Re: Tying Down Bike on Trailer advice.
Dont they put too much pressure on the bars?Smitty wrote:general consensus..monkey straps seem to be the best
http://www.myspace.com/9planetsmusic" target="_blank
- SoundGuy
- KSRC Contributor
- Posts: 1719
- Joined: Wed Aug 22, 2007 1:22 pm
- Bike: ZX10R
- State: New South Wales
- Location: Sydney
Re: Tying Down Bike on Trailer advice.
Yeah i plan to tie down the rear via the footpegs as wellNeka79 wrote:dont fully comp the front susp when u tie it down...u dont want too much movement, but u dont wanna pop seals...
keeping in mind that that tyre down system uses only a rear tyre, i ussually tie down the back as well (from rear footpegs or sumthin) which mean with 4 tie down points, u dont have to comp all ur susp so much...
thats how i do it anyway...
http://www.myspace.com/9planetsmusic" target="_blank
- the kid
- KSRC Addict
- Posts: 3948
- Joined: Thu May 12, 2005 5:10 pm
- Bike: Yamaha
- State: Victoria
- Location: Bendigo
Re: Tying Down Bike on Trailer advice.
I have snapped a bolt holding the bar while tied down with monkey straps and am now wary of them . Feel that those rear tyre metal cover things are the way to go .SoundGuy wrote:Dont they put too much pressure on the bars?Smitty wrote:general consensus..monkey straps seem to be the best
And Gos's idea of a front system is a beaut . He had it posted up a while ago , Wasteland tie down system , or some such ???
I have never had an issue with a fork seal "blowing" while tied down .
Ummmm let me see
- holly
- Warming up
- Posts: 68
- Joined: Tue Sep 25, 2007 7:33 pm
- Bike: ER6
- State: Victoria
- Location: Jupiter Mining Corporation
Re: Tying Down Bike on Trailer advice.
like the look of these
http://www.kyaracing.com.au/product.htm" target="_blank
http://www.kyaracing.com.au/product.htm" target="_blank
"Even with an IQ of 6,000, it's still brown trousers time" - Holly, Red Dwarf.
- jewjew
- KSRC Member
- Posts: 315
- Joined: Thu Jun 02, 2005 3:13 pm
- Bike: GPz900
- State: New South Wales
- Location: Sydney, Curl Curl
Re: Tying Down Bike on Trailer advice.
i was thinking you could use individual ties for the breaks and then have a tie across all three bikes to keep them upright with only light force on the suspension.
- MadKaw
- Administrator
- Posts: 9671
- Joined: Tue Apr 20, 2004 4:33 pm
- Bike: ZX10R
- State: New South Wales
- Location: Windsor or the Creek..
- Contact:
Re: Tying Down Bike on Trailer advice.
Not by me... they bent my handlebars.. (they were light weight alum tube clip on type though)Smitty wrote:general consensus..monkey straps seem to be the best
Dave
2010 Z1000
ex bikes
05 ZX-10R Race Bike - No.77
95 ZXR750R M Race Bike - No. 75
98 ZX9R Race Bike - No. 000
zx6r, zx7r, GPX750, GPX500, lots of KX's.

I ride way too fast to worry about cholesterol
2010 Z1000
ex bikes
05 ZX-10R Race Bike - No.77
95 ZXR750R M Race Bike - No. 75
98 ZX9R Race Bike - No. 000
zx6r, zx7r, GPX750, GPX500, lots of KX's.

I ride way too fast to worry about cholesterol
-
- KSRC Contributor
- Posts: 1035
- Joined: Sun Jan 02, 2005 3:22 pm
- Bike: Suzuki
- State: New South Wales
- Location: Sydney (again...)
Re: Tying Down Bike on Trailer advice.
I loop the tie-downs over the bottom triple clamp, going up and back down between the front wheel and fairing maw, and wrap the flapping end of one of them around the front brake lever. I've never seen the tie-downs which slip onto the bars damage anything, but I don't trust them all the same. Also, tying down the way I do it means the tie-downs don't flare out too far from the bike, leaving room for other bikes. It does mean you have to have your tie-down points close by to where the front wheel will slot in, though, but this shouldn't be an issue on a purpose-built trailer. Lateral stability also won't be an issue. The bike can only fall over if the front tyre skips sideways, which is impossible to happen if it's in a wheel channel, which, being on a proper bike trailer, it would be.SoundGuy wrote:As I've mentioned in another post, I'll be putting the bike on a mates 3 bike trailer and driving down to Pi for a track day next month.
I'm looking for some advice on whats the best way to tie the front down,
Frankly, though, the most ingenious tie-down solution I have ever seen would have to be Gos' steel-rod-through-the-axle method... the only concern I'd have about it would be if there were two or three bikes side by side. Because the method immobilises the wheels only, leaving the bikes to bob up and down on their suspension, you'd have to make sure the footpeg of one bike couldn't take a gouge out of another bike's muffler if they chose to move in different directions.
Old wives' tale on roadbikes. The amount of travel roadbike forks have doesn't result in enough reduction in the volume of the air gap to increase the pressure enough to bother the fork seals.for such a long period of time, without damaging the forks seals.
Re: Tying Down Bike on Trailer advice.
I like these.holly wrote:like the look of these
http://www.kyaracing.com.au/product.htm" target="_blank" target="_blank
- SoundGuy
- KSRC Contributor
- Posts: 1719
- Joined: Wed Aug 22, 2007 1:22 pm
- Bike: ZX10R
- State: New South Wales
- Location: Sydney
Re: Tying Down Bike on Trailer advice.
Some good points there mate.I-K wrote:I loop the tie-downs over the bottom triple clamp, going up and back down between the front wheel and fairing maw, and wrap the flapping end of one of them around the front brake lever. I've never seen the tie-downs which slip onto the bars damage anything, but I don't trust them all the same. Also, tying down the way I do it means the tie-downs don't flare out too far from the bike, leaving room for other bikes. It does mean you have to have your tie-down points close by to where the front wheel will slot in, though, but this shouldn't be an issue on a purpose-built trailer. Lateral stability also won't be an issue. The bike can only fall over if the front tyre skips sideways, which is impossible to happen if it's in a wheel channel, which, being on a proper bike trailer, it would be.SoundGuy wrote:As I've mentioned in another post, I'll be putting the bike on a mates 3 bike trailer and driving down to Pi for a track day next month.
I'm looking for some advice on whats the best way to tie the front down,
Frankly, though, the most ingenious tie-down solution I have ever seen would have to be Gos' steel-rod-through-the-axle method... the only concern I'd have about it would be if there were two or three bikes side by side. Because the method immobilises the wheels only, leaving the bikes to bob up and down on their suspension, you'd have to make sure the footpeg of one bike couldn't take a gouge out of another bike's muffler if they chose to move in different directions.
Old wives' tale on roadbikes. The amount of travel roadbike forks have doesn't result in enough reduction in the volume of the air gap to increase the pressure enough to bother the fork seals.for such a long period of time, without damaging the forks seals.

http://www.myspace.com/9planetsmusic" target="_blank
- GForce
- KSRC Member
- Posts: 269
- Joined: Sun Jul 16, 2006 1:53 pm
- Bike: ZX6R
- State: South Australia
- Location: Adelaide
Re: Tying Down Bike on Trailer advice.
get a mate to help because it makes life alot easier. use the front straps and make sure they are tight and also get something to tie down the back.
- ozx6r
- Team Crim
- Posts: 1194
- Joined: Tue Jan 18, 2005 7:29 pm
- Bike: ZX6R
- State: Queensland
- Location: Brisbane
- Contact:
Re: Tying Down Bike on Trailer advice.
i was going to buy a tyredown soon!
is there enough interest to try and organise a group buy?
they retail for $159 so i'm not sure what we could get them for but i will find out if anyone is keen
is there enough interest to try and organise a group buy?
they retail for $159 so i'm not sure what we could get them for but i will find out if anyone is keen
97 - zx6r
05 - zx10r
05 - zx10r
- SoundGuy
- KSRC Contributor
- Posts: 1719
- Joined: Wed Aug 22, 2007 1:22 pm
- Bike: ZX10R
- State: New South Wales
- Location: Sydney
Re: Tying Down Bike on Trailer advice.
I'm definitely interestedozx6r wrote:i was going to buy a tyredown soon!
is there enough interest to try and organise a group buy?
they retail for $159 so i'm not sure what we could get them for but i will find out if anyone is keen

http://www.myspace.com/9planetsmusic" target="_blank