The wife & I are planning to visit friends in the Midwest this summer, and I plan to do some riding while there since the husband has bikes. I looked at the "hitch haul" setup that fits in the trailer hitch, but I'd be pushing the weight limit, plus it seemed a little cumbersome. The idea of a small trailer appealed to us since it could be used to haul other things. I shopped around for a trailer, but nothing local was reasonable. Enter Harbor Freight.
After reading their reviews, I found I was not the only one that bought their trailers for bike hauling. I ended up with #90154, which is the 4'x8' folding model with 12" tires. It was on sale for $299, but I found a coupon online for 20% off (apparently this is commonplace).
I decided to not use the folding function, and bought some 2x6 and 2x10 pressure treated planks for the deck. I had to shave 3/4" off one 2x10 to get them to fit. I used 1/2" eye bolts in place of one of the stake pocket bolts to use for tiedown points (2 front & 2 per side), and used grade 8 hardware throughout. I put a Harbor Freight motorcycle chock on it, and had to run a strip of 1.5" angle under the planks to bolt it down using all 4 holes (Lowes sells angle in 4' lengths, perfect fit w/o cutting). I used 3/8x2.5" carriage bolts to bolt down the planks and 3" carriage bolts to bolt down the chock. I used their LED tail lights and ran an extra black wire for ground. I also enclosed all wiring in nylon loom as well as running it through the frame vs. below it. I also got a spare tire since it was on sale. The final item was a hand winch. I need to fab up a bracket for this item, so it is not installed yet. I probably have a little over $400 in it in material.
I made a ramp out of a 2x10 with some ramp ends from Lowes, and added some 2x4x12" boards in the stake pockets to carry it via two 1/2" carriage bolts and wing nuts. I don't care for this ramp (too narrow & flimsy) and will be adding a wider aluminum dual ramp set from Harbor Freight.
2012 UPDATE
I'm linking other relevant posts here for convenience. The trailer has been used to haul several large bikes, a Honda ST1100, a V65 Sabre, and my blue '80 GS1000G. I've had zero issues with it at highway speeds of 65~70 MPH.
Page 2 post 17- jack and ramp
Page 2 post 20- ramp storage
It came out really nice. I bought it on a Friday evening and had it ready to roll Monday afternoon working on it a few hours per day. Still need to add a jack to the front of it so it can sit level in the garage.
Here are some pics from construction, and the end result:
It comes in two fairly small boxes (the box in the upper left is the spare tire):
LED tail lights & hand winch:
Parts unboxed:
Prelim assembly:
Eye bolt detail:
Wiring detail:
Decking & chock trial fit:
As promised, here's the GS1000 on it:
On this side, you can see the boards that hold the ramp:
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