Truck camper tie
downs are installed on the truck to create attachment points for securing your
camper. When choosing tie-downs for the rear of your truck, consider whether
you may ever want to tow a trailer with that truck, or if you'd like to carry a
bike rack or cargo carrier. If you would like to tow, then you will need a
trailer hitch. If your truck already has a hitch installed, then you will need
to note this when searching for the correct rear tie-downs as they may be designed
to attach to your hitch as opposed to the vehicle's frame. It's also important
to understand that if you want to use your hitch while hauling a camper, you
will need to use a hitch extension so that the receiver opening clears the
camper. Most hitch extensions reduce your overall weight capacity by about
half, so you'll have to keep this in mind when determining whether your setup
can handle a trailer or a hitch-mounted accessory. Truck camper tie downs Canada are
the physical anchors on the “truck” side of the system. Manufacturers provide
the other tie point on the camper, typically in the form of large eyebolts
secured to the camper frame.
There are two basic
categories of truck camper tie downs:
Bed-mounted tie downs
Not only are truck
campers getting heavier, but also pickup trucks are getting lighter because the
material being use in newer models are thinner metals. Back in the day, people
tried using stake pocket tie downs and seriously damaged their pickup beds when
the tie downs twisted up the bed when torque forces made themselves known. Bed-mounted
tie downs are in the form of a large metal plate that bolted on the outside of
the pickup bed, sandwiched between the pickup bed and the cab of the truck. To
mount it up, you bored holes through the bed corners and ran bolts to hold the
plates tight to the bed. Aside from having to blow holes in your truck bed, the
lightweight, thinner construction of current pickups has caused the same bad
cases such as bed damage. Bed-mounted ties are choice of mounts in past. However,
they just don’t seem to have the appeal or even the ability to serve today’s
newer models.
Frame-mounted tie downs
A couple of different
types of tie downs fall into this category. The first is often referred to as a
“belly band” style. This is a flat bar of metal, or a square tube, passing
under your truck bed, running crosswise. The belly band sticks out from under
the side of your truck, a back a bit from the cab of the pickup. The belly bar
ties to the camper via a chain and turnbuckle system. Typically, a belly bar is
a clamp system that allows you to attach it to the truck frame. Some people
consider the belly bar to be a bit of dangerous because of its exposure,
depending on how far out from under the bed of the truck the bar extends.
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