Saturday, 26 December 2020

Home again after Christmas

 It was a short trip. Drive up on 23rd, drive back on Christmas day.  

We were worried about Meg travelling but, once again, she amazed us.  She had been drooling on short trips over less than a nile, so a round trip of 720 miles was a bit worrying. But after a little nursing from Linda, she then found here own space in a little area behind the passenger seat - and she slept. As the trip progressed she moved out and finally was happy to sleep in her bed, on the floor, or on a sofa.  No drooling, and full of beans when we stopped.  She is an amazing dog.

Thursday, 24 December 2020

The Frozen North and technology

So we drove from Wadebridge in Cornwall to Ribchester in Lancashire yesterday.  This was a journey covering about 360 miles, and a temperature drop of around twelve degrees.  We had a little light rain, but most of the journey was in torrential rain.  However taking it easy at 60mph max and stopping for an hour every two hours made it quite easy. 

Today’s technology is amazing.
I have a fairly cheap phone - a Moto G5.  Before the journey I used the packing list stored on the phone to check off all items for packing.
On the journey I used it to navigate using Google Maps, and also listen to the radio via the GPS signal which is far more reliable than either DAB or FM or any other signals. We listen via the vans sound system by coupling via Bluetooth.   Also we could listen to radio Cornwall anywhere we like. Indeed I have listened to Radio Cornwall while driving over a mountain range in the Andes in Peru.  We also listened to a selection of DJ Linda's music from her iphone via Bluetooth.

On the stops on the way and after arrival I used the hotspot on the phone to connect my old Lenovo Thinkpad to the internet to catch up on what a dog's breakfast Boris is making of the Covid situation (744 deaths today and still rising), and Brexit (about to sell the fisherman short after pretending he was never going to do it all along). I also read my emails.

When we arrived I used it as a torch to read the instructions on the parking meter.

Then this morning I Skyped for an hour and a half with my son in Australia.

All of this on a phone that cost me around £150. (Although my phone and wifi bills for the lifetime of the phone will completely swamp this amount). We take this all for granted.  If I could go back in time and try to tell my Dad about this he would not have believed me.  This has all came about in the last thirty years or so. I wonder what the next thirty has in store.

Sunday, 6 December 2020

Fitting a Scooter Rack

We have a scooter.  It's a Suzuki Address 110 and weighs 100Kg so should be OK for fitting on a rack on the van. But first some calculations are needed to ensure the van is operated safely.


The original Peugeot plate shows a GVM of 3300kg.  This seemed at odds with some other specs I had read so I queried it with Autosleepers.  Apparently it should have had a small mod before delivery which uprates the GVM.  I contacted Autosleepers in 2014 and they carried out the modification and fitted a new plate.

The new chassis plate shows that the rear Axle can take up to 2000kg, and the front Axle up to 1750kg, but the combined weight can only be 3500kg or less.

The handbook indicates  that Mass in Running order is 2780kg. Subtract that from the 3300kg maximum weight and we get the 520kg.  BUT the upgrade boosts this to 720kg  Hoo bloody ray!!!

The handbook also suggests that after taking typical figures for equipment and personal effects, the typical weight left over is 224kg.   Now I usually travel with my wife and dog which will add around 75kg. That leaves 149kg. Now the scooter and the rack together weigh 130kg so there would appear to be only 19kg to spare IF I had not had the modification. But now I have 219 kg to spare!

What I need to do is to load up the van as it would be for travelling and get it onto a weighbridge. If the total weight is more than 3370kg I will need to think about how to get the weight down before fitting a scooter rack, but I don't think it will be close to that.

I'm heading North for Christmas so the plan is to get the van loaded as much as possible. get it weighed, then weigh any extra bits going in and out.

After that I can work out the effect of the scooter on each axle.

The handbook also shows the weight on each axle in "Running Order". This totals the 2780 or the "Mass in running order" shown above. The modification to the suspension has increased the MTPLM Rear to 2000kg.

But this also tells me the distribution of the weight. As the scooter will be behind the back axle it will actually reduce the weight on the front axle and increase the weight on the back axle by more than the weight of the scooter and the rack.  The distance from the back axle to the back bumper is 1.7m.  The overhang of a Watling carrier is 450cm, but I estimate the centre of gravity (COG)to be around 300cm behind the bumper. So COG of the scooter and rack is 2m behind the axle.
The distance between axles is 3m and the weight of the scooter plus rack is 130kg.  So the uplift on the front axle is 2/3 x 130 kg or 86kg and the downward force on the back axle is 217kg.

Now, if I were to load up to the original handbook limits I'd only be adding 130kg which is less than the extra 200kg allowed.
The original spec allowed 520kg as max user payload. If we used up to this figure, and it was distributed evenly it would be 260kg per axle. i.e. 1568kg on the front and 1732kg rear.  The scooter would change this to  1481kg front and 1949kg rear. This gives us margins of 269kg front and 51kg rear and 70kg GVM.
Now we are unlikely to use up to the 520kg anyway,  (the weighbridge will reveal all) so there seems to be no obstacles to getting the rack fitted.
It would seem prudent to stow any heavy items (such as extra water, and the passenger!) as far forward as possible.

So I went to a public weighbridge - Kernow grain services
They measured the weight of the van with me my wife and the dog in it, and not a lot else as 3380kg.  According to the manual the Mass in Running Order (MRO) is 2780kg. That includes the essential habitation equipment and the driver.  Other bits and pieces, (including the wife) may total arround 100kg so that would be around 3000kg.  The weighbridge disagreed by 500kg!

The rear axle weight was measured as 1860kg. The manual says 1472. Add around 50kg for bits and pieces and that would be 1520 - so disagreement is 338kg.

They did not measure the front - but derived that from total - rear to give 1520kg or a disagreement of 162kg

I find it difficult to believe that the van is half a tonne heavier than the book weight - that is five motor scooters! Three and a half on the back and one and a half on the front.  Maybe a previous owner has used it for smuggling and the chassis is filled with gold bars!  Or more probably the weighbridge needs calibrating.  The general opinion on the Autosleepers Owners forum is that the manual is pretty correct.

I think I'll go with the manual figures.

NOW the calculation

Wheelbase is 3 meters
Overhang is about 2 meters
So any weight on the end of the overhang will result in - 2/3 of the weight on the front axle. So if scooter + rack = 130Kg then uplift on the front is 87Kg.
The weight on the back wheels  will go up by the weight of the rack and scooter plus this 87Kg. or 217Kg.

But we need to know what the weight was on the axles without the scooter or rack. The handbook gives us 1308 front and 1472 in running order - which is without any payload. If we add the max original payload of 520Kg and distribute that between the two axles it gives 1568 front plus 1732 rear.

If we now add in the effect of the scooter and rack we get 1483 front and 1945 rear.  The rear is 97% of maximum allowed!  That is a little close for me. .

Dammit - I think I've just calculated myself out of the idea.

BUT there IS a solution. The Easy Lifter Hydra Trail has its own wheels on casters and is rigidly fixed to the tow-bar. OK, I don't have a tow-bar so that is and additional cost over the £1600 for the "trailer".  But it would fit on any vehicle with a tow-bar.  So that will cost me over £2000 including the tow-bar.  But I guess it's an investment.

Downside is the increased length of the van, and the resultant difficulty in parking. In particular the inability to put the overhang over the grass verge of a car park so we can squeeze into a car space. Also, even without the trailer being attached the ground clearance at the overhang is drastically reduced.

A two seater ebike would also be an option.  These are around 30Kg and so could be carried on the bike rack. But they currently retail at around £2500 which I think is too dear.  My scooter was only £2300.

Realistically, if we had the scooter with us we would still be reluctant to leave the dog alone in the van for more than an hour or so.

Oh well.