How much does it miss by? Is an air spring conversion viable (to enable kneeling to fit under the carport)?
Hi all
I am getting a little tired of taking my roof top tent on and off so that my 130 will fit under my carport.
So....my little brain got thinking - do I lift the carport roof? Seemed to be a huge effort and would involve the total demolition of the carport and starting again, or a ute crane to lift RTT on and off the 130.
Now - I am in two schools on thought on this - either have the crane sitting on an extended pole bolted to the ground or somehow mount the crane between the 130 cab and canopy. All that would be mounted to this position would be a steel pole that I can simply attach the crane onto when removing or placing the RTT in place.
I enjoy steel fabrication work, so no issues with me spending the weekend with the grinder and the welder.
RTT is about 60kgs (Hannibal 1.4m). So any fabrication of the mount for the crane will need to be strong and to the chassis somehow
Any other ideas out there?
Andrew
1998 Landrover Defender 300Tdi 130 HCPU Expedition
1972 Peugeot 504 Sedan - Daily Driver
How much does it miss by? Is an air spring conversion viable (to enable kneeling to fit under the carport)?
Sounds alright.
Most problems with a vehicle mounted crane that I have seen relate to the crane base being installed in a corner of a ute tray, and then loads which are too heavy pull the tray down unless a hi-lift is supporting that corner - would not apply in your proposal.
I've often thought they may assist ageing types like me get spares off the roof safely
I rigged up a 3 line pulley system fixed to my carport frame to raise the RTT on and off the Defer. The carport has ample clearance for the RTT to be lifted off the ground, reverse Defer under and lower onto back. Getting the plates on the RTT to line up with the mount holes is a RPITA when solo but manageable.
I'd go with a land based crane/pulley system. Unless you see use for the crane when away from home. A tray mounted crane is just inviting your mates to hit you up to move stuff on the misapprehension that a crane will make light work of it.
MLD
Current: (Diggy) MY10 D130 ute, locked F&R, air suspension and rolling on 35's.
Current: (but in need of TLC) 200tdi 110 ute & a 300tdi 110 ute.
Current: (Steed) MY11 Audi RS5 phantom black (the daily driver)
Gone: (Dorothy) MY99 TD5 D110
Is your roof top fitted to the canopy or onto of cab?
If it’s on your canopy You could use your towbar to slip the hoist into.....
Gday, love the idea and I'm glad to hear people actually take them off when not using them..they seem to be have become an accessory for show rather than purpose...sorta like tow mirrors ugly micky mouse things fold them in when your done for Christ sake.
Rant over the only issue I can see with the one in the picture is the winch system. Once you raise the base you may struggle to reach the winch, easy enough fix but something to think about.
Also I'd use pins (maybe with testing) rather than bolts in the extension dismantle it easier. Installing it on the def is a good idea also if you can get some more use out of it other than the tent, other wise your carrying the weight of the crane all the time for nothing.
Good luck hope you post some pictures when your done
Cheers Jim
i suspect that the effort to get it on the car has forced the owner to leave it there, as you say, as an accessory. If i didn't have the pulley there would be buckleys to get it on an off without 3 other mates. with a 130 i have the benefit of a deck to stand on. in a 110 or any 4x4 sedan necessitates balancing on wheels, door jams and anything else that gives you a toe hold. Add a 1.2m x 1.4m 50kg box to the equation and you quickly get to "stuff the extra fuel".
MLD
Current: (Diggy) MY10 D130 ute, locked F&R, air suspension and rolling on 35's.
Current: (but in need of TLC) 200tdi 110 ute & a 300tdi 110 ute.
Current: (Steed) MY11 Audi RS5 phantom black (the daily driver)
Gone: (Dorothy) MY99 TD5 D110
^^ Absolutely.
Mine is definitely not left on there for show - only because its a PITA to get on/off, and I'd have to find somewhere to put it when removed.
Mind you - mine's not a daily drive either.
I'm picking you'd need a crane arm about 1.5m long at least to get to the center of the RTT, and IMO installing/removing that arm with winch etc would be a PITA.
Like MLD, I'd be looking at a land based system, but curious to know what's the complexity of the existing carport that would require it to be completely demolished/rebuilt to make it higher?
Generally they are a relatively simple job (not saying quick) of disconnecting the roof structure and raising it, then adding the extra height to the walls/poles etc to support it at the new height, then lowering the roof down again.
Steve
1985 County - Isuzu 4bd1 with HX30W turbo, LT95, 255/85-16 KM2's
1988 120 with rust and potential
1999 300tdi 130 single cab - "stock as bro"
2003 D2a Td5 - the boss's daily drive
hmmm all good ideas...
The RTT sits on top of the canopy, so fabricating a mount that slips into the tow bar using 50 x 50 x 4mm wall RHS might be the way to go.
I do like the idea of having the crane permanently mounted onto the truck somehow as I also carry a second spare wheel/tyre on the roof rack.
Looking at the example ute crane in my first post, I think I will replace the hand winch with a remote controlled electric winch.
I'll buy the crane first then start head scratching some more
Cheers
Andrew
1998 Landrover Defender 300Tdi 130 HCPU Expedition
1972 Peugeot 504 Sedan - Daily Driver
What?
Any other ideas? ... Crane .... Defender...
mmmm yes!
Regards
Daz
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