I've not owned a Nitto rack, so these numbers come as a surprise -- very
low. The Tubus Fly, all 11 oz of it, and its silver brother, are rated for
18 kg/40 lb; the Logo for 40 kg/88 lb, and the Duo front for 33 lb.

Hell, I've carried 35+ on a Pletscher, but it wasn't pretty.

On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 4:40 PM, William <tapebu...@gmail.com> wrote:

> What Grant is telling us is:
>
> If you are running the Mark's Rack, try hard to keep the weight of the
> cargo on the mark's rack to 4.4 lbs or less.
> If you are running the Nitto Mini front rack, try hard to keep the weight
> of the cargo on the Mini Front Rack to 13 lbs or less.
> If you are running the Nitto Big Rear Rack, try hard to keep the weight of
> the cargo on the Big Rear Rack to 44 lbs or less.
>
> Gallon of milk on the Mini Front Rack is no problem, because 8lbs is less
> than 13lbs.
> Gallon of milk on the Mark's Rack is pushing it, because 8lbs is greater
> than 4.4lbs.
>
> My understanding of what Nitto does is that they do a very vigorous shake
> test with that load.  If it passes the shake test for that load, then they
> recommend that load.  That's why it's in lbs, and not in force - amplitude
> - frequency - cycles etc.  Even though the Nitto test in actuality is in
> force, amplitude, frequency, cycles.  An Engineer might like those numbers,
> but it's hard to take that into the real world.
>
>
> On Thursday, February 28, 2013 3:15:13 PM UTC-8, Michael Hechmer wrote:
>>
>> I can't make any sense out of these rack weight numbers.  Rack weights
>> are not calculated in lbs.  A gallon of milk weighs 8  lbs., which is a lot
>> for a mini front rack, but I wouldn't expect the rack to break.  What are
>> you telling us?
>>
>> On Thursday, February 28, 2013 11:37:52 AM UTC-5, grant wrote:
>>>
>>> Mark's rack is 4.4 pounds.
>>> Nitto Mini, 13.
>>>
>>> The big rears, 44.
>>>
>>> Nitto is conservative, but try to heed these. The racks are well made of
>>> good materials, but are not unbreakable...even tho they're CrMo and Nitto
>>> and sold by us. Doooooo be careful, and if you put a basket on a Mark's
>>> rack and use it for milk--I mean, if you cannot be talked out of that, then
>>> lift the load off the rack with straps to the handlebars front and rear,
>>> making sure the load is lower than the bar, so that cinching the strap
>>> doesn't impose a downward force on the load and multimply the stress on the
>>> rack.
>>> Check bolt tightness.
>>> The specs come with racks now, and are on the sight.
>>>
>>> Be careful, safe, and aware.
>>>
>>  --
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-- 

-------------------------
Patrick Moore, Albuquerque, NM, USA
For professional resumes, contact Patrick Moore, ACRW
http://resumespecialties.com/index.html
-------------------------

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