914 Trailering Tie Down Question, Where to tie it down? |
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914 Trailering Tie Down Question, Where to tie it down? |
flat4tom |
Jan 15 2010, 03:28 PM
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#1
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Member Group: Members Posts: 51 Joined: 6-January 10 From: Shingletown CA Member No.: 11,207 Region Association: Northern California |
Hello all,
I'll be bringing home my 914 tomorrow. I have a trailer but have not loaded or tied down a 914 onto it before...only VW's and my Model A Ford. This is a stock suspension car, i.e. no tiedown loops on the chassis. I will be using nylon tie down ratchet straps - I have 4 of them and use them on my other cars - the BIG ones. Question: what points on the car should I use to tie the car down to the trailer? Suspension points, shock mounts, what....? Any advice? Thanks Tom |
BMXerror |
Jan 15 2010, 07:39 PM
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#2
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 1,705 Joined: 8-April 06 From: Hesperia Ca Member No.: 5,842 |
I trailer mine to the track all the time. I use 15 foot ratcheting tie downs and criss-cross front and rear. Fronts through the A-arms right by the rear bushing, and rears around the bearing carrier portion of the trailing arm. Just make sure on the rears you fish the tie down between the bearing carrier and the brake caliper. You don't want to cinch down on the caliper.
Mark D. |
URY914 |
Jan 15 2010, 09:33 PM
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#3
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I built the lightest 914 in the history of mankind. Group: Members Posts: 124,279 Joined: 3-February 03 From: Jacksonville, FL Member No.: 222 Region Association: None |
I trailer mine to the track all the time. I use 15 foot ratcheting tie downs and criss-cross front and rear. Fronts through the A-arms right by the rear bushing, and rears around the bearing carrier portion of the trailing arm. Just make sure on the rears you fish the tie down between the bearing carrier and the brake caliper. You don't want to cinch down on the caliper. Mark D. Mark, why do you criss-cross the tie downs? I see people do this and have never thought it was a good idea. If one comes loose, the car will pull over and the other side will be loose too because it has slack in it. Do people do it because they see others do it? |
BMXerror |
Jan 15 2010, 09:53 PM
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#4
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 1,705 Joined: 8-April 06 From: Hesperia Ca Member No.: 5,842 |
I trailer mine to the track all the time. I use 15 foot ratcheting tie downs and criss-cross front and rear. Fronts through the A-arms right by the rear bushing, and rears around the bearing carrier portion of the trailing arm. Just make sure on the rears you fish the tie down between the bearing carrier and the brake caliper. You don't want to cinch down on the caliper. Mark D. Mark, why do you criss-cross the tie downs? I see people do this and have never thought it was a good idea. If one comes loose, the car will pull over and the other side will be loose too because it has slack in it. Do people do it because they see others do it? Not to drift this thread (because I hate drifting!), but I think I know what you mean, and I don't criss-cross them to where that would happen. I hook one end to (say) the right rear hook on the trailer, loop it through the right trailing arm, then hook the ratcheting end to the left rear on the trailer, and opposite for the other side. And actually, if you do it this way, and for some reason you forget to tighten one of your straps, the remaining one will only get tighter (by a small amount) if the rear of the car tries to walk in either direction. To answer your question, I do it this way because I thought about it and it looked like the best way to do it to me. The thought was keeping it stable both forward and back, and side to side. Maybe I can post pictures for your approval. Mark D. |
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