Hi All!
I have recently replaced my car with another new to me, a 2012 Ford Focus hatchback, and I'm looking at bike racks for it (despite the Nomad's legendary load capacity, this is so the
car can carry the
bike, not the other way 'round!). This is a novel concept for me, since my domestic tours have always begun and ended from my front door under leg power alone.
Since I will soon be fitting the car with a 1¼in receiver-type trailer hitch to tow my small utility trailer, a 2-bike hitch mount rack appeals. It has the advantage of minimizing the long lift of a heavy bike to the top of the car, takes less of a hit on fuel economy, protects the bike from the many bugs I usually encounter on my summer drives, and prevents me from skimming the rack off the car on low drive-thru overhangs and on entering my garage. Disadvantage: The Nomad might become the world's most expensive bumper.
A pretty complete list of what's available to fit is here:
http://www.etrailer.com/partlist/Ford/Focus/Bike%20RackLooking at various kinds of hitch-mount racks, I have decided to pass on the kind that suspend the bike from two arms. I prefer having the bike stand on its own tires, so what I'm looking for is a platform hitch-mount rack, the kind I would like allows the central support to fold down so I can access the car's hatchback, and some also allow the wheel trays to fold upright to minimize width while underway without a bike aboard.
The "hitch" in the works is the Nomad's long 43½in/110.5cm wheelbase -- too long for some platform racks unless I get a "tandem adapter" which then makes the rack too long.
Does anyone have experience carrying a Nomad on a rack of this type and if so, do you have a preference?
The types I've seen use either metal hoops to hold the wheels, or semicircular trays with security straps. The bike itself is held in place with a vertical padded hook that is secured with either a large knob or a ratchet mechanism. There have been isolated yet dire tales of these hooks marring the bike's paint unless padded with a rag or additional vinyl tubing.
I'm not so concerned about anti-theft security because as far as I'm concerned any of the racks can be disassembled to steal a bike. I don't plan to leave mine unattended on the car. The rack must be compatible with the bicycle's mudguards, racks, and bottles. The Thule featured in the video above is like the racks mounted on buses in my city and incompatible with the Nomad's extended front mudguard. The Swagman series is emerging as a leading candidate:
http://www.swagman.net/category/platform-racks/...in particular the Swagman XC Cross-Country 2-Bike Hitch Mount Rack:
http://www.amazon.com/Swagman-Cross-Country-2-Bike-2-Inch-Receiver/dp/B0001VO1YY/ref=cm_cmu_pg__header/178-8987910-0001166A less expensive candidate seems to have a lot going for it as well: The SportRack 2EZ Premium Hitch Platform System:
http://www.amazon.com/Swagman-Cross-Country-2-Bike-2-Inch-Receiver/dp/B0001VO1YY/ref=cm_cmu_pg__header/178-8987910-0001166 ...and...
http://www.rackattack.com/product-pages/sportrack-2ez-premium-hitch-platform-system.asp This one is even less expensive:
http://www.etrailer.com/tv-install-pro-series-q-slot-2009-ford-focus-ps63134.aspxThe lesser cost appeals but too often I've seen USD$6,000 bikes carried on USD$50 racks, and I've sometimes seen the results when they come off(!) or fail (!!!), so build quality and excellence in design trump lowest cost for me in this application. I have attached a small composite showing the car. The car measures 70in/178cm between the outsides of the tires and the body extends a bit beyond that at the fenders. The bike measures about 69½/176.5cm inches end-to-end including the mudguards, so I am hoping it will ride in the shadow of the car's plan view and not snag anything at the edges. <worried> Seems like a lot to hang from a 1¼in/32mm section of square steel tubing....
Thoughts? Ideas? Many thanks in advance for your feedback and suggestions. This is the time to stop me if I am about to make a Big Mistake.
Best,
Dan. (...who realizes new-car expenses don't stop with the purchase)