Share.

20 Comments

  1. w1n5t0nM1k3y on

    Get a rack that doesn’t have a hinge? I’m not sure what this rack is or where you got it, but it looks like an accident waiting to happen when that one’s into your spokes at speed.

  2. Broad-Minute-2955 on

    Take it off. I mean, if it can move like this, there is no function. It can only cause trouble.

  3. TIghten the bolts. Maybe take them off and add a shim from an old butyl inner tube.

    Or quick and not elegant, use a zip tie and the nub will act as a stopper.

  4. possible to rotate the brackets 90 deg so they are on the vertical part of the main body of the rack?

  5. Loosen the bolts, detach it from the bike, bolt it to a solid wall so it doesn’t get anywhere your spokes when your bike is moving.

  6. Far-Adhesiveness3763 on

    Piece of 2×1 through the wheel between the two side hinged parts. Cable tied to the hinged bit it’ll not move…..neither will your wheel mind but that wasn’t in the design request

  7. not particularly elegant however you would not need much aluminium L shaped bars to bind onto the Seat stay + Chain stay, that you could clamp to to that hanging bit ( no idea what it is called – Flap of death ???? )

    the profile would not need to be much, you could use a tube but they are more flexible, the other option is to try and re-enforce from the upper sections with some aluminium tubes or L bars, but that would increase the pressure on the mounting hardware and may cause it to fail early.

  8. You are relying on friction alone on a shaft. That is a losing battle against physics, especially given how long that part is. You atleast need a huge set screw, but the holding part is plastic, so you are limited to what the plastic can handle, which is not alot. If you can get those parts in metal, then you can use the set screw approach, but it will fail over time. You could drill a hole through the shaft and put a screw of pin through it, but the issue is that this is probably hollow aluminum, which is kind of weak. Your best bet is to find a mounting point at the bottom and design something to have it stop at that point. Or just buy a better rack….

  9. Appears you are missing a part that attaches that thing to the seat stay, or you have a piece of junk that’s waiting to cause a crash.

  10. Single_Restaurant_10 on

    Topeak Supertourist or Topeak Explorer. Sell that one on & get a proper rack.

  11. Zip tie the bottom corner of it to the frame of the bike near the rear tire dropouts.

Leave A Reply