Mine doesn’t have doors on each end. I’m seriously thinking about one of the Bursig or one of the clones. Then I can turn the thing around easily. Front wheel could be cranked to one side to get a little more clearance.
I was needing to buy a new paddock stand for my single swingarm but a...
It's a lot smaller than I thought it was when I first saw the picture. I pictured something more like the rollers on bike trainers and therefore imagined it was for use in a garage.
Even as small as it actually is, is someone ever going to pack that thing on a trip for wheel cleaning or chain...
I’m way too short to duck walk my bike down. I’d have to back it down on foot.
I wish I had enough room inside to turn it around. That would be the best. I considered a few solutions but they’d all require me to have a big 8’ circle clear in the container. This thing is going to be tight as...
I am by nature lazy and I have one million other things I could do at the cottage that I don’t get around to
So I am predisposed to buy something if it’s close in price. An aluminum ramp would be more versatile than a bespoke one too.
I think I’d like to buy something like the first one...
Ah, but I wouldn't have discovered the new love of my life.
I'm thinking about buying a ramp. With the price of pressure-treated lumber these days... I'm guessing a 4' wide, 5' long ramp would be about 60$?
Prices of some used ramps on Kijiji are not much more than that, and no work and no...
Mine is a 6x12 aluminum utility trailer. According to the company website it weighs 655lbs. I don't think the weight of the trailer is the problem - it's the way the ramp sticks up so high. At speed I believe it acts as a giant sail. I wouldn't be surprised if similarly sized enclosed...
I have two utility trailers of different sizes, and I'm still thinking about buying something like this, but one that can haul 3 dirt bikes. 3 dirt bikes requires my bigger trailer and that thing just kills fuel economy - probably halves it, if I'm lucky.
It's the long ramp that's the...
I was hobbled for about 36-h. Seriously, could barely walk after rolling, cutting, and stacking logs, and bending over to do so. That's just with a mid-range saw with just a 20" bar weighing only about 14 lbs. And what was I did was comparatively nothing to what a pro could accomplish.
I...
To put that in perspective, at 65mph you need the length of one Canadian football field to stop.
At 110mph, it's about 2-1/2 football fields.
That is ... insane.
In our neck of the woods, most of it is hardwood. We have very little softwood on our property. The logs stacked here is just a fraction of the wood I have to cut. There is no shortage of hardwood. Sometimes I pull a few wagon loads of wood to an elderly neighbour who burns firewood. Our...
LOL. I could probably build a fun trials course on my property with all the terrain afforded by Canadian Shield grant and the newly downed trees providing a nearly unlimited source of free lumber. Neighbours probably wouldn't be thrilled though.
I'm worried the drop will be too steep and that will cause its own traction problems - not so much for the bike, but for me. Once it starts going down, I'll need to be able to control it and that might be challenging as I try to walk it down a steep grade.
I'm happy to build something that...
It's only a 20' container. ;)
There are cloaking materials that have been demonstrated that are the size of the LED panels that their "cloak" was constructed of. So they could have worked with one of those companies working on that technology.
But that wouldn't have been as funny.
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.