Tie downs
Moderator: Staff
-
Cheese Monkey
- Learner Driver
- Posts: 989
- Joined: Mar 11th, '08, 15:10
- Location: Plymouth
Tie downs
So I just bought myself a van, need to add some tie down points to fit 2 bikes in. Where is best to put them, and what are good ones to use? Where can I get them? Can they go straight into the ply base or is it better to cut a hole into the ply and bolt them in?
Thinking 3 down each side, 3 down the middle.
Thinking 3 down each side, 3 down the middle.
[img]http://i208.photobucket.com/albums/bb150/xblack_sunshinex/cheesy-1.jpg[/img]
- deej
- Learner Driver
- Posts: 5969
- Joined: Dec 30th, '05, 21:13
- First Name: Dave
- Location: ST AUSTELL
- Contact:
Re: Tie downs
2 at the front, buy yourself a handlebar strap
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/New-Motorcycle-Ha ... 286.c0.m14
and then just have 2 tie down points at the back of the bike. thats what i use on a trailer and if tied down properly doesnt move on a 300 mile journey, should be more than enough for a van
the other option is to spend 60quid on a wheel mate that the front wheel locks into
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Motorcycle-wheel- ... 286.c0.m14
then all you need is a few smaller ratchet straps
couple of ideas for you to start with
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/New-Motorcycle-Ha ... 286.c0.m14
and then just have 2 tie down points at the back of the bike. thats what i use on a trailer and if tied down properly doesnt move on a 300 mile journey, should be more than enough for a van
the other option is to spend 60quid on a wheel mate that the front wheel locks into
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Motorcycle-wheel- ... 286.c0.m14
then all you need is a few smaller ratchet straps
couple of ideas for you to start with
http://www.averysmotorcycles.co.uk use code SWB10 for discount
- billinom8s
- Site Admin
- Posts: 20545
- Joined: Sep 10th, '05, 22:31
- First Name: simon
- Location: Teignmouth
Re: Tie downs
when we have tied the bikes to the trailer have learnt a few lessons
1: don't use cheap tie straps, the strap stretches and the bikes move, i got a couple of sets from b&q £15 a pair but do an awesome job.
2: front is the important part, pull the straps down and compress the shocks, that way it wont allow the bike to 'bounce' (like yours did in bambams truck)
3: can get away with only one strap on the rear, feed it up close to the swing arm pivot, thru the subframe and then back down, it compresses the rear shock and the bike is locked.
4: to top it off, tie wrap the front brake lever to the grip as this will stop the bike from moving front to back if the straps do come loose.
just remember to release all the straps when u get to the track or home to release the pressure on the shocks
as for tie down points i would say 3 across the front of the van and then 3 across the rear(approx position of the swing arm pivot, but thats just me)
middle point on each shared by each bike unless of course u think it's too much for one pivot then go for 2 points in the middle
1: don't use cheap tie straps, the strap stretches and the bikes move, i got a couple of sets from b&q £15 a pair but do an awesome job.
2: front is the important part, pull the straps down and compress the shocks, that way it wont allow the bike to 'bounce' (like yours did in bambams truck)
3: can get away with only one strap on the rear, feed it up close to the swing arm pivot, thru the subframe and then back down, it compresses the rear shock and the bike is locked.
4: to top it off, tie wrap the front brake lever to the grip as this will stop the bike from moving front to back if the straps do come loose.
just remember to release all the straps when u get to the track or home to release the pressure on the shocks
as for tie down points i would say 3 across the front of the van and then 3 across the rear(approx position of the swing arm pivot, but thats just me)
middle point on each shared by each bike unless of course u think it's too much for one pivot then go for 2 points in the middle
07977507395

don't forget we are onX and Instagrambelieve it or not !!!
southwestbikers@southwestbikers (original, I know.
KTM 1290 SDR
KTM 690 supermoto smc R,
Zx10r trackbike,
ktm 350 excf muddy
Suspension and bike work undertaken.

don't forget we are onX and Instagrambelieve it or not !!!
southwestbikers@southwestbikers (original, I know.
KTM 1290 SDR
KTM 690 supermoto smc R,
Zx10r trackbike,
ktm 350 excf muddy
Suspension and bike work undertaken.
- TLS-Moose
- Site Admin
- Posts: 7148
- Joined: Dec 14th, '05, 22:59
- Location: The fringes of NA, sadly not the UK equivalent of LA!!
Re: Tie downs
The advice given is the ideal - generally two to the front and if you want to ensure no movenet one at the rear
However, with a van, you can get away with the sidestand, a wheel-chock, and one ratchet-strap/tie-down
Push the bike right to the front, with the front wheel hard into the corner behind the driver, on left-hand lock. Put the bike in first gear and the wheel-chock (A wheel scotch pinched from Laira or Tavvy might do
) pushed hard into the rear of the back wheel. Hook the ratchet strap somewhere around the right hand footpeg then over the saddle and down to a floor anchor somewhere behind the passenger seat of the van and hey-presto, all sorted 
However, with a van, you can get away with the sidestand, a wheel-chock, and one ratchet-strap/tie-down
Of all the things I have ever lost, I miss my mind the most .....
Handle stressful situations like a dog - If you can't eat it or play with it, pee on it and walk away
Handle stressful situations like a dog - If you can't eat it or play with it, pee on it and walk away
-
Cheese Monkey
- Learner Driver
- Posts: 989
- Joined: Mar 11th, '08, 15:10
- Location: Plymouth
Re: Tie downs
I might do that one when I got to pick it up tommorow 
[img]http://i208.photobucket.com/albums/bb150/xblack_sunshinex/cheesy-1.jpg[/img]
- deej
- Learner Driver
- Posts: 5969
- Joined: Dec 30th, '05, 21:13
- First Name: Dave
- Location: ST AUSTELL
- Contact:
Re: Tie downs
Si - spot on
I always leave the bike in gear too,won't move anywhere then with a tie round the front brake
I personally wouldn't leave a bike strapped down on its side stand,been at a few days where peeps have turned up with a broken side stand due to the pressure
Have seen a few people put they're bikes up on paddock stands in the van,not sure how secure it is as I've never tried it myself
I always leave the bike in gear too,won't move anywhere then with a tie round the front brake
I personally wouldn't leave a bike strapped down on its side stand,been at a few days where peeps have turned up with a broken side stand due to the pressure
Have seen a few people put they're bikes up on paddock stands in the van,not sure how secure it is as I've never tried it myself
http://www.averysmotorcycles.co.uk use code SWB10 for discount
Re: Tie downs
reading the question and the replies i think most people are missing the point.Cheese Monkey wrote:So I just bought myself a van, need to add some tie down points to fit 2 bikes in.
Where is best to put them, and what are good ones to use? Where can I get them? Can they go straight into the ply base or is it better to cut a hole into the ply and bolt them in?
it's not about strapping a bike down but where to get and fit the tie down rings.
- billinom8s
- Site Admin
- Posts: 20545
- Joined: Sep 10th, '05, 22:31
- First Name: simon
- Location: Teignmouth
Re: Tie downs
ebay or fasteners shop online
i don't think they are tapped in, more like a spreader shaft. speak to julian he is yoda when it comes to stuff like this
i don't think they are tapped in, more like a spreader shaft. speak to julian he is yoda when it comes to stuff like this
07977507395

don't forget we are onX and Instagrambelieve it or not !!!
southwestbikers@southwestbikers (original, I know.
KTM 1290 SDR
KTM 690 supermoto smc R,
Zx10r trackbike,
ktm 350 excf muddy
Suspension and bike work undertaken.

don't forget we are onX and Instagrambelieve it or not !!!
southwestbikers@southwestbikers (original, I know.
KTM 1290 SDR
KTM 690 supermoto smc R,
Zx10r trackbike,
ktm 350 excf muddy
Suspension and bike work undertaken.
-
Cheese Monkey
- Learner Driver
- Posts: 989
- Joined: Mar 11th, '08, 15:10
- Location: Plymouth
Re: Tie downs
Just bought these, will have to recess them into the ply and bolt in. Easy
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll? ... K:MEWNX:IT
Oh van was deal of the century, 95 reg, swb hi top, roof rack, tow bar, nice stereo, good bodywork, literally FSH, MOT jan, tax Sep, mint apart from two windows that need replacing, £450

http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll? ... K:MEWNX:IT
Oh van was deal of the century, 95 reg, swb hi top, roof rack, tow bar, nice stereo, good bodywork, literally FSH, MOT jan, tax Sep, mint apart from two windows that need replacing, £450
[img]http://i208.photobucket.com/albums/bb150/xblack_sunshinex/cheesy-1.jpg[/img]
- billinom8s
- Site Admin
- Posts: 20545
- Joined: Sep 10th, '05, 22:31
- First Name: simon
- Location: Teignmouth
Re: Tie downs
jammy git !
did you find a fiver in the glove box too !!!!
did you find a fiver in the glove box too !!!!
07977507395

don't forget we are onX and Instagrambelieve it or not !!!
southwestbikers@southwestbikers (original, I know.
KTM 1290 SDR
KTM 690 supermoto smc R,
Zx10r trackbike,
ktm 350 excf muddy
Suspension and bike work undertaken.

don't forget we are onX and Instagrambelieve it or not !!!
southwestbikers@southwestbikers (original, I know.
KTM 1290 SDR
KTM 690 supermoto smc R,
Zx10r trackbike,
ktm 350 excf muddy
Suspension and bike work undertaken.
- Scotty
- Learner Driver
- Posts: 816
- Joined: Mar 22nd, '07, 19:31
- First Name: Simon
- Location: The New Forest
Re: Tie downs
Your set up will only be as strong as what it's bolted into. My old Tranny had a ply floor so I removed it and found the proper anchor points for tie-downs in the floorpan - these are the daddies, a proper boss welded into the floorpan for a single bolt fixing through them, I used M10s with a self-locking nut underneath, they won't go anywhere. Following that, I marked up the floor panels and used a hole saw to rebate it so the tie-downs were accessible but tidily recessed.
You can tie a bike down rock solid with a single ratchet strap - use the tie-down behind the driver's seat (as mentioned elsewhere), bike up hard behind the bulkhead panel on full left hand lock, leaning by a few degrees against the right side panel (wooden ideally, if the sides aren't panelled, put an old seat cushion between the bar end and panel or you'll get a big dent in it!) and in gear if you like, and thread the strap up through the fairing and over the top yoke and stright back down again. Wind it down hard to compress the forks a few cm and the bike will not budge - if it does move, you haven't done it right - try again. For extra peace of mind (if you really need it), you can run another single strap over the right side of the subframe, exhaust bracket, footrest bracket or similar to compress the rear suspension a little.
Important point - ensure that the ratchet strap mechanism isn't close to any bodywork or it'll rub and chafe against it.
Now go and buy yourself a folding aluminium ramp if you don't already have one....
You can tie a bike down rock solid with a single ratchet strap - use the tie-down behind the driver's seat (as mentioned elsewhere), bike up hard behind the bulkhead panel on full left hand lock, leaning by a few degrees against the right side panel (wooden ideally, if the sides aren't panelled, put an old seat cushion between the bar end and panel or you'll get a big dent in it!) and in gear if you like, and thread the strap up through the fairing and over the top yoke and stright back down again. Wind it down hard to compress the forks a few cm and the bike will not budge - if it does move, you haven't done it right - try again. For extra peace of mind (if you really need it), you can run another single strap over the right side of the subframe, exhaust bracket, footrest bracket or similar to compress the rear suspension a little.
Important point - ensure that the ratchet strap mechanism isn't close to any bodywork or it'll rub and chafe against it.
Now go and buy yourself a folding aluminium ramp if you don't already have one....
"Racing is life. Anything before or after is just waiting"
Steve McQueen
Wheelies - they ARE big and they ARE clever
Steve McQueen
Wheelies - they ARE big and they ARE clever
- deej
- Learner Driver
- Posts: 5969
- Joined: Dec 30th, '05, 21:13
- First Name: Dave
- Location: ST AUSTELL
- Contact:
Re: Tie downs
no he asked how many points and where too so we all went off on one telling him everything he neededbambam wrote:reading the question and the replies i think most people are missing the point.Cheese Monkey wrote:So I just bought myself a van, need to add some tie down points to fit 2 bikes in.
Where is best to put them, and what are good ones to use? Where can I get them? Can they go straight into the ply base or is it better to cut a hole into the ply and bolt them in?
it's not about strapping a bike down but where to get and fit the tie down rings.
http://www.averysmotorcycles.co.uk use code SWB10 for discount
-
Cheese Monkey
- Learner Driver
- Posts: 989
- Joined: Mar 11th, '08, 15:10
- Location: Plymouth
Re: Tie downs
No but I did find 5p
Going to try the ply first, see how it is, theres gonna be 4 screws holding the mount in so should be ok
Going to try the ply first, see how it is, theres gonna be 4 screws holding the mount in so should be ok
[img]http://i208.photobucket.com/albums/bb150/xblack_sunshinex/cheesy-1.jpg[/img]
- deej
- Learner Driver
- Posts: 5969
- Joined: Dec 30th, '05, 21:13
- First Name: Dave
- Location: ST AUSTELL
- Contact:
Re: Tie downs
can you not put long nuts and bolts in through the ply and floorpan, thats what i did in my old T4. will make it more secure than few screws that could pull out of the ply
http://www.averysmotorcycles.co.uk use code SWB10 for discount
- TLS-Moose
- Site Admin
- Posts: 7148
- Joined: Dec 14th, '05, 22:59
- Location: The fringes of NA, sadly not the UK equivalent of LA!!
Re: Tie downs
Aawwww b*ll*x - it's a track bike that'll probably end up getting slung down the track, scuffed and battered ..... just juck it in their and let it fend for itself

Of all the things I have ever lost, I miss my mind the most .....
Handle stressful situations like a dog - If you can't eat it or play with it, pee on it and walk away
Handle stressful situations like a dog - If you can't eat it or play with it, pee on it and walk away