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Thanks
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Yeah, I have a wire welder and wire brush... The thought did cross my mind. Same thing though. I can see reasons to do it, and not to.bird man wrote:Have you considered having the metal strips welded to the rack. I can think of reasons to weld them on and not to weld both.
Thanks.moriver wrote:I have a 1500 Pelican on the back of my KLR. Its just mounted with 4 bolts with big fender washers on the inside of the box. Its been on a year now with no issues.
My garage has been very cold lately. I have been meaning to ask you about this... Did this work well? I think it may be the way I wind up mounting the box.bird man wrote:One time I mounted a tool box as a rear luggage box and used a piece of plywood for an adapter plate to the luggage rack. One half or three quarter inch ply wood is plenty strong and would add lots of support the box you are mounting. Even found some rubber groument/spacers ,at the hardware store in plumbing , to put between the box and adapter so it was rubber mounted. I would recommend marine plywood for weather duraility and quality.
Yes, light stuff up topsafiri wrote:What are you putting into the Pelican case? As it is a top case, I would assume light stuff (sleeping bag, clothes, etc.). Keep CG lower by putting heavy crap in side bags. If that is the case [pun], I would skip the plywood and just use the case. Pelican cases tend to be pretty stiff. Plywood is adding a lot of weight and some height.
dually noted, thank you.safiri wrote: Anything heavy you can position inside the case so as to be directly over the rack. If the case proves insufficiently stiff, then go back and add the plywood.
Wow, I never thought of it that way. That makes total sense, and seems so obvious once you said it. Thank you.safiri wrote: Those metal bars could also be mounted on the inside of the case. After all, you are trying to keep the case from being ripped off of the rack.