harbor freight wheel chock for an ultra
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Same here, have hauled 2 baggers more than 4K miles in the back of the toy hauler with no problems using the HF chocks.
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Yes and no. The bike was a Honda Rune which had a curb weight of 840 lbs. Had just under $500 in it. Sold it on this forum for $300 to a guy who made the same trip with it and his ride was an Ultra. I sold it because I only needed it for that one trip.
I hauled it on a HF 4X8 trailer, with a HF pivoting tongue jack, 10lb D rings, HF spare tire braces and a HF ramp carried under the bed.
Worked well for the 1,400 mile round trip to the Dragon.
You can see the HF chock in this pic.
I have a garage full of HF tools acquired over a 30 year period. None have broken. I do services on 7 motorcycles, five sports cars, SUV, trucks and cars.
Impact tools, air compressors, floor drills, power tools, torque wrenches, dial indicators, micrometers, wheel balancer, welder and many others. Again without any failures. I have less than 10% of the cost of "Name" brand tools cost. But I have the same performance.
So for the HF haters - too bad your loss not HF's.
I hauled it on a HF 4X8 trailer, with a HF pivoting tongue jack, 10lb D rings, HF spare tire braces and a HF ramp carried under the bed.
Worked well for the 1,400 mile round trip to the Dragon.
You can see the HF chock in this pic.
I have a garage full of HF tools acquired over a 30 year period. None have broken. I do services on 7 motorcycles, five sports cars, SUV, trucks and cars.
Impact tools, air compressors, floor drills, power tools, torque wrenches, dial indicators, micrometers, wheel balancer, welder and many others. Again without any failures. I have less than 10% of the cost of "Name" brand tools cost. But I have the same performance.
So for the HF haters - too bad your loss not HF's.
Last edited by lh4x4; 08-06-2011 at 12:15 AM.
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