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Hi wise people, I have just fitted a Fehling rear rack to my 2017 ex. The rack says it’s rated to about 5kg. The box I intend to fit weighs about 4kg.
So I can only carry one glove and a packet of crisps before I go over the weight limit. My question is, is reality different to the sticker? Do I actually fit a box or just use a cargo net? If I carry two gloves will the rack break off and kill me, or worse, scratch the bike? Will the RLETS that took me under two minutes to fit compensate for the puny rack? Do I just look at the rack and polish the chrome? Should I just be thankful that I now have a better handle for heaving the bike on an off the centre stand? No photos because it’s dark, the bikes locked in the garage and there’s no lights in there and I’ll wake the bike up if I start waving a torch around. I thank you in advance for the expected responses.
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One wise guy here, advising you that if you can use it as a handle to heave it on the centerstand, you are good to load it up. Honda pretty much says that even so much as a pair of RLETs wills disturb the design parameters, so don't blame THEM if you wind up as a hood ornament for a cement truck. I suspect Fehling is being overly cautious.
Disclaimer: The foregoing is mere speculation on my part, so don't try taking me to court either.
Ben
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I agree with Ben. I can sit on my Honda rack and it has a pretty low rating by Honda. I took the sticker off...
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(07-03-2020, 08:34 AM)Ben70_imp Wrote: One wise guy here, advising you that if you can use it as a handle to heave it on the centerstand, you are good to load it up. Honda pretty much says that even so much as a pair of RLETs wills disturb the design parameters, so don't blame THEM if you wind up as a hood ornament for a cement truck. I suspect Fehling is being overly cautious.
Disclaimer: The foregoing is mere speculation on my part, so don't try taking me to court either. 
Ben
Disclaimers... like party food for lawyers! Thanks though Ben
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(07-03-2020, 08:37 AM)Lord Popgun_imp Wrote: I agree with Ben. I can sit on my Honda rack and it has a pretty low rating by Honda. I took the sticker off...
Now that’s an idea! Sticker removal. Had it not been there I’d never have considered the rack lacking in substance. Seems like the way forward. Thanks pops
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Well, it's not about how much weight the rack will hold as how it will make the bike handle. Of course, the weight recommendation is on the conservative side, but you know somebody's going to put a milk crate full of old brake rotors in it and at the first S-bend, it'll wag the dog, and the next-of-kin's lawyers will be looking to put his kids through college off it.
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Crisps and torches. I love English.
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Have 7OL bag (w/extras attached) that sits on my Honda OEM rack.
Here is pic on my Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1349...5834773348
Bike handling is excellent up to 110+MPH
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Keep in mind that static loads are one thing. But start hitting pot holes and speed bumps and now you have dynamic loads that multiply your static load - could be a lot depending upon the accelerations seen.
High tail loads can make the handling wonky, so approach the limits with caution.
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(07-03-2020, 09:07 AM)pekingduck_imp Wrote: Well, it's not about how much weight the rack will hold as how it will make the bike handle. Of course, the weight recommendation is on the conservative side, but you know somebody's going to put a milk crate full of old brake rotors in it and at the first S-bend, it'll wag the dog, and the next-of-kin's lawyers will be looking to put his kids through college off it.
Yes of course, self preservation society!
That makes sense, thank you.
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(07-03-2020, 09:40 AM)Bheezy27403_imp Wrote: Crisps and torches. I love English.
It’s an excellent language, often envied for its ability to convey nuance but rarely utilised to its full extent because of ridiculous spellings and grammar. There, they’re fighting over their plurals.
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(07-03-2020, 09:42 AM)bflint_imp Wrote: Have 7OL bag (w/extras attached) that sits on my Honda OEM rack.
Here is pic on my Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1349...5834773348
Bike handling is excellent up to 110+MPH 
Wow, that’s a large load! I guess it depends how it’s balanced out. Thanks.
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(07-03-2020, 10:21 AM)Rboe_imp Wrote: Keep in mind that static loads are one thing. But start hitting pot holes and speed bumps and now you have dynamic loads that multiply your static load - could be a lot depending upon the accelerations seen.
High tail loads can make the handling wonky, so approach the limits with caution.
Thanks, I knew I could rely on this forum for rational explanations!
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[quote='Frankie' pid='269644' dateline='1593811318']
Will the RLETS that took me under two minutes to fit compensate for the puny rack?
Wow you put on Rlet's in two minutes? You are truly a wizard.
Hardly anything will fit on my Fehling rack it is so tiny. I roll up a rain suit on it.
In 1984? when Honda brought out the Goldwing Interstate which had a trunk, people loaded them up and the handling got wonky. Honda's retro solution was to bolt a giant lead weight to the headstock on the frame between the fork ears.