Help me spend some more $$: bike racks
I did the unthinkable and traded in my trusty pickup truck for a nimble little sedan.
I now need a bike rack and am interested in your recommendations. Here are my requirements:
- Must fit an Acura TSX
- Must not scratch the car or the bikes
- Must hold at least two bikes
- Must hold the bikes securely
- Must stay on the car securely
- Should be a trunk rack. I'm too short to deal with a roof rack, and I'm not quite ready to put a hitch on the car.
- Should be easy to install
- It would be great if it easily folded up, so I could put it in the trunk.
I've looked (online) at Thules, Yakimas, and Saris'. I'm interested in anyone's experience with their trunk racks -- good, bad, or ugly.
Thanks!!
-- Melissa
Great input!!! Keep 'em coming!!
Thanks for your input so far -- this is exactly the kind of stuff I was hoping to see!!
So now you've got me thinking:
-- Saris Bones -- will it fit my car? (It should, but when I looked up the fit for my car on the Saris site, it listed the Guardian Angel racks.)
-- Maybe I should look into putting a hitch on my car sooner rather than later.
-- Maybe a roof rack isn't so bad...
-- RackandRoad (nee Sports Rack) on Camden is a nice place. Just went there last month for one of my roommate's vehicle, and they were very helpful and have a nice selection.
BTW, I bought one of my roommates a Bauer hitch rack for her b-day a couple of years ago when she had a Jeep. My roommates have since gotten a camping trailer, and installed a hitch on the back of the trailer, and put the Bauer rack on the hitch. For the maiden voyage of the trailer & bike rack, we put our three bikes on it and drove to the north bay. After we'd crossed the Golden Gate Bridge, some guy was gesturing wildly at us, and we knew the bikes were in trouble. They were. They'd come out of the part that holds the top tube in, and fortunately had gone back towards the trailer rather than out toward the road. Unfortunately, there were stacked on top of each other, and the paint was rubbed off in several places. The good news is that it was my mountain bike, and not my carbon road bike. On the mt. bike, it looks like battle scars. On the road bike, well, I would have had some choice words and shed a few tears. I think that the huge vibration from being at the end of the trailer was more than the rack could stand -- lots more force there than if it had only been on the back of a vehicle. We solved the problem with duct tape -- taped down the part that held the top tubes. We're looking into a permanent solution.
Anyway, thanks again for the great suggestions!
-- Melissa