I was wondering if anyone has advice/suggestions on how to pull a bicycle using a bicycle? I've done the "pull a bike behind using my arm" thing, but I didn't like it too much as I had some trouble steering and I got some uncomfortable (you stole that bike) stares. Anyway, I've got 2 occassions coming up where pulling a bike would come in handy. I have a rear rack and I'm thinking the best way would to somehow attach the front wheel of the transported bike to the rack so that only the rear wheel is rolling. And I'm guessing one or some of you smart people have done this before. If you have, let me know or if you have any other suggestions, please shoot.

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I've been interested in this idea of towing a bike by bike (and not necessarily on or by trailer) and I've seen and heard of mounting a fork block to a rack and towing like a kids trail-a-bike. So I tried it today and was impressed by how easy it works. I will say that it does effect handling, especially walking or at slow speeds and tight maneuvering. Compared to ghost riding, infinitely better.

Easy to set up, stop by Open Shop at WTB tomorrow if you're interested. Bike needs to have a rack, $20 for the fork block part + a donation for the shop time. Have a look...

Yeah, Alex! Thanks for sharing.

Bikefreeek said:

I've been interested in this idea of towing a bike by bike (and not necessarily on or by trailer) and I've seen and heard of mounting a fork block to a rack and towing like a kids trail-a-bike. So I tried it today and was impressed by how easy it works. I will say that it does effect handling, especially walking or at slow speeds and tight maneuvering. Compared to ghost riding, infinitely better.

Easy to set up, stop by Open Shop at WTB tomorrow if you're interested. Bike needs to have a rack, $20 for the fork block part + a donation for the shop time. Have a look...

Carrying the front wheel - or any spare wheel - is really easy.  Wear a belt. Everything will be easier the first time if that belt is worn in a pair of pants with belt loops. Put the wheel next to your hip. Lace the belt under the rim and refasten the belt buckle. Ride away. The wheel will hang straight down. It will hang square to your hip. It will not bounce or interfere with pedalling in any way. If there is any problem it is most likely that you will forget the wheel is there. You can carry a pair of wheels this way, one on either side. In fact you can carry a pair of wheels on each side, though they will bounce and clatter a bit and you will be wide in traffic. Done this hundreds of times and shown it to dozens of riders. Be cautious mounting and dismounting.

You don't need a commercial mounting block to attach a fork to a rack. All you need is a spare axle with correctly spaced locknuts and a quick release. Secure the axle very very securely, no wiggle, no possibility of coming loose. Hoseclamps are good and lashing with lots of small gauge bare wire is better. Some racks will have the bars in the wrong place. Do not attempt this on fancy tubular racks. Otherwise this is usually simpler and cheaper and more compact than using a prebuilt fork mount

Looks great. Funny, the reason I posted this was that I need to bring a bike home (the Panasonic PT-3500) that I've been working on over there at WTB. I'm also hoping to pull a bike to the bike swap in March. 

 

I've got an idea for stabillity to the set-up you've posted here - it involves building something like training wheels (or a variation of them) to stabilize the back wheel of the bike being towed.
 
Bikefreeek said:

I've been interested in this idea of towing a bike by bike (and not necessarily on or by trailer) and I've seen and heard of mounting a fork block to a rack and towing like a kids trail-a-bike. So I tried it today and was impressed by how easy it works. I will say that it does effect handling, especially walking or at slow speeds and tight maneuvering. Compared to ghost riding, infinitely better.

Easy to set up, stop by Open Shop at WTB tomorrow if you're interested. Bike needs to have a rack, $20 for the fork block part + a donation for the shop time. Have a look...

Borrow a Yuba?

This was our primary reason for upgrading to a yuba a few months ago. I carry multiple kids but sometimes my 6yo likes to ride. There is a tow tray attachment for one of the running boards where we can pop any size bike in, strap it down and be off within 60 seconds. Best thing we've found so far and I've tried a lot if different ways.

And that is how baby bikes are made children. Any questions?

Bikefreeek said:

On Saturday, I stopped by West Town Bikes and Alex was kind enough to help me with the set-up he posted here. It was dead easy to pull together- it required drilling 2 holes into my rack top and attaching a fork block. I tested it out and it seems to work quite well. I'll be towing a bicycle on Tuesday, so I'll post some more photos of the set-up.

If you attach a fork block with a couplke of bolts I would suggest a 'safety cable' so if the bolts break/loosen or the rack releases in anyway you are still connected to allow a controlled (well sorta anyway) stop.

If you look at any towed vehicle you'll notice that as well as a swivel mounting (ball hitch or truck trailer pad) there is usually a safety chain or cable to assur the attached portion will not take of on its own.

You wouldn't need a Krytonite NY chain but a 1/16 wire rope should be enuf.

Jeff

So I tried the front axle/hose clamp combo and it looks pretty sturdy! Thanks for the idea! As suggested, I'm gonna use a bungee as a back-up in case something comes loose. Now I just need to test it!

Here's the close-up of the set-up:

Looking good. Lebster at West Town welded a permanent tow hitch for me a couple of years ago. It's the same idea as Alex showed above but it brings the center of gravity lower. It doesn't affect handling at all when moving forward. Backing the bike up is impossible though.

and here it is in action: http://onelessminivan.tumblr.com/image/22201846744

How was the stability of the towed bike?

Old thread here but years ago I had this same problem and was inspired by these posts. I've since made a DIY towing solution that looks a lot like Bikefreeek's post, except there is no need to disassemble any parts of the bike. Check it out!

https://mschausprojects.blogspot.com/2020/07/how-to-tow-bike-with-a...

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