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15th November 2012, 10:56 AM
#1
RoofTop tent AND spare wheel
Hi
I am contemplating load configurations for a Simpson crossing next year. Intially I thought I would use the roof basket to carry a spare and a couple of jerry cans and use a tent packed in the vehicle for accomodation.
but
I have a good rooftop tent which is far more convenient for road trips. However if I use this I was thinking I couldnt also carry a spare on the roof. I am now rethinking this. I could put a spare in front of the RT tent either attached to bars ( which I have) or in a smaller basket/rack. I would then look at getting an auxilary tank for the extra fuel instead of jerry cans.
Would this be too much weight to have on the roof of the D1 for a trip like this? I seem to recall seeing quite heavy loads carried on the roofs of Camel discos so suspect it would probably be ok.
thks for any advice/experience
Lindsay
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15th November 2012, 11:28 AM
#2
I think you have to bear in mind the Camel Trophy Discoverys had a heavy duty roof rack, and a internal roll cage, I think the rack was even attached to the cage.
However, a roof tent and spare wheel should be fine..
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15th November 2012, 12:54 PM
#3
I had a long roof rack on both my D1 and D2, and had heaps of room for extra stuff, including a large BBQ (bloody awkward and heavy-ish to get on and off) aswel as chairs etc, and of course the RTT.
The same rack is now on the defender although shortened to suit the dual cab, and I carry my spare wheel up there as well.
Travels well and doesn't feel top heavy at all,, I'm running factory suspension.
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15th November 2012, 05:28 PM
#4
I did the Simpson with a rooftop tent and rack sack up the front and it was fine.
Mind you I had heavy duty springs and Bilsteins which reduce body roll and swaying as some of the tracks are at quite an angle. I never bothered with a 2nd spare wheel and just carried a plug repair kit and a tube. I did get one puncture on the old ghan railway track which I plugged but no problems crossing the Simpson.
Cheers
Mark
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18th November 2012, 11:20 PM
#5
I'd be looking at the positioning of the load and what type of roads/tracks you'd be driving.
I did a road trip last year with a Front Runner roof rack and spare wheel stored near the front and my RTT at the rear. After a 40km run down a heavy corrugated track I started to get nasty knocks from the top of the windshield...the Pillar had cracked where it meets the roof line.
In preparation for an Indian expedition next year I've invested in a dual rear wheel carrier which should help reduce the weight up top.
See here http://www.aulro.com/afvb/discovery-...roof-load.html
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19th November 2012, 06:43 AM
#6
Thks Streaky
That is exactly the kind of thing I want to avoid. I had a RR classic that had cracked frt pillars as well, but at the bottom.
I will be doing desert and off road trips so my setup has to cope with corrugations and shocks. I'm loathe to do a trip like the simpson without a second spare. Im happy to put the RTT as it is on 3 supports at the rear of the vehicle..but how do I carry the second spare? Or is carrying a plug kit sufficient as long as I have 5 good tyres? If the companion vehicles share tyre sizes then that might solve it for this trip....
Lindsay
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19th November 2012, 07:22 AM
#7
i carried two spares for my simpson trip and didn't use either
i did start the trip with 4 brand new tyres BFG AT's
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19th November 2012, 11:25 AM
#8
One of the other guys on the Simpson trip (Pajero) just strapped a tyre casing to his existing spare on the back door and it stayed there without any drama's.
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19th November 2012, 11:36 AM
#9
the only problem with a casing is most have not changed a trye manually.......
i had to change heaps in a previous job. a changed one by hand prior to my simpson trip convinced me to take a full spare. i would rather have a beer at the end of a days drive and let somebody else change/repair my tyre
Linds, if yo go down this track, once you buy the tyre changing gear have a go in your back yard prior to your trip
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19th November 2012, 11:52 AM
#10
I have never tried to change a tyre on rim before and I hope I never have to. I can only begin to imagine how much swearing would be involved. I would avoid that idea at all costs. I could see myself not being able to do it at all and still being stranded with a perfectly good tyre and a perfectly separated rim.
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