Mazda3/Mazdaspeed3 General/Maintenance Discussion of the Mazda3 and MazdaSpeed3

Best bike rack for 3

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old August-2nd-2007 | 07:12 AM
  #1  
Phuufme's Avatar
Thread Starter
Registered User
 
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 14
From: San Antonio, TX
Phuufme is on a distinguished road
Best bike rack for 3

I just purchased my Mazda 3 5-door (touring, true red). Love it!

I am looking for a bike rack that M3 owners think works the best. The 3 kinds of racks are (1) roof, (2) hitch, and (3) rear. I have use all 3 kinds, but for the M3, I am wondering which brand/model people have used and which one you like best.

Thanks for your thoughts.
Old August-5th-2007 | 02:05 AM
  #2  
timmsumm's Avatar
Registered User
 
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 3
timmsumm is on a distinguished road
I have a Yakima roof rack with 3 bike mounts and it works great. I prefer bike mounts which are fork mount as they are very sturdy. I've had no problems with with wind noise or reduced mileage which may be related to the wind deflector I got.
Old August-5th-2007 | 08:25 AM
  #3  
Phuufme's Avatar
Thread Starter
Registered User
 
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 14
From: San Antonio, TX
Phuufme is on a distinguished road
Originally Posted by timmsumm
I have a Yakima roof rack with 3 bike mounts and it works great. I prefer bike mounts which are fork mount as they are very sturdy. I've had no problems with with wind noise or reduced mileage which may be related to the wind deflector I got.
Thanks for the info.
Old August-5th-2007 | 10:28 AM
  #4  
JoshP5's Avatar
Registered User
 
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 837
From: Rockland, Maryville
JoshP5 is on a distinguished road
Another vote for the Yak, a good piece of engineering. The ease of installation and design efficiency are impressive. I have two Raptor bike mounts that perform flawlessly.

There's a bit of wind noise only when the sunroof shade is open. My mileage isn't as good as some other Proteges (Yeah, not a MZ3 but whatever) and I attribute that to the rack.

It also lends a purposeful look to the car.
Old August-19th-2007 | 04:19 PM
  #5  
southpawboston's Avatar
Registered User
 
Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 23
southpawboston is on a distinguished road
i have a 13 year old yakima roof rack on my 3. wonderfully engineered. i just get new Q-clips and pads for each new car i get and transfer the rack from car to car. i've never once had any damage or scratching from the rack. i even drove 3000 miles across country with the rack loaded with a bike and a bunch of gear. honestly, i think the thule systems are just as good (even though i never owned one) but with all else being the same, i give the edge to the yak since it's home-grown in the US, and customer support rocks.

EDIT: true what the previous poster said, having a roof rack may cut your fuel efficiency by a couple of MPGs... i keep mine on in the summer months when i use my bike. i don't usually ride the rest of the year so i take the rack down and store it 2/3 of the year.
Old August-24th-2007 | 03:12 AM
  #6  
pmeilakjr's Avatar
Registered User
 
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 12
pmeilakjr is on a distinguished road
Hitch of course!

I have had both types of racks - roof and hitch. By far the hitch is the way to go!

Can install or remove the hitch rack within one minute - roof rack can take 15-30 minutes because you have to measure where the crossbars go - secure them. then put the faring on, secure it, then put the bike racks on each side, secure them. then you have to lift your bike onto the rack - secure it. oh and make sure you don't drop anything or you could smash your roof / sunroof. Plus the roof rack is noisy with or without bikes, make sure you don't drive into a covered parking garage with your bikes on - end of bikes and racks

After a long hard ride - you don't want to lift the bike up on to the roof. Also, you have to be very careful that the tire does not hit the spoiler if you open the rear hatch.

Not to be negative about roof racks for bikes but I've had them - they suck compared to a nice hitch mount. The Thule t2 works great, takes all of a minute to install then another 15 seconds to put the bike on or off.

www.agees.com/thule/Thule2.htm

Best bike rack for 3-resized_img_7862.jpg

Best bike rack for 3-resized_img_7856.jpg

Best bike rack for 3-resized_img_7858.jpg

Best bike rack for 3-resized_img_7853.jpg
Old August-24th-2007 | 05:53 PM
  #7  
Ferdball's Avatar
Registered User
 
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 2
Ferdball is on a distinguished road
Option 4: Inside

Name:  IMG_4518.jpg
Views: 12243
Size:  87.1 KB
Old August-24th-2007 | 09:12 PM
  #8  
Phuufme's Avatar
Thread Starter
Registered User
 
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 14
From: San Antonio, TX
Phuufme is on a distinguished road
Thanks pmeilakjr. Excellent info!
Old August-25th-2007 | 12:41 AM
  #9  
JoshP5's Avatar
Registered User
 
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 837
From: Rockland, Maryville
JoshP5 is on a distinguished road
The rack went on before the dealer plate came off!

I considered the hitch mount but it doesn't allow hatch access with the bike on. My spoiler is 2" away from the tires when my hatch is open. Don't know if it's closer on the 3.
Old August-25th-2007 | 01:59 AM
  #10  
pmeilakjr's Avatar
Registered User
 
Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 12
pmeilakjr is on a distinguished road
That's what is nice about the Thule t2 - you can lower the rack away from the car and then open the hatch with the bikes still attached. It is a little heavy at that point but I try do everything before I put the bike up on the rack.

Cheers!

Peter
Old August-25th-2007 | 12:56 PM
  #11  
JoshP5's Avatar
Registered User
 
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 837
From: Rockland, Maryville
JoshP5 is on a distinguished road
Ah, that's a nice feature.
Old October-26th-2007 | 01:34 AM
  #12  
foofighter's Avatar
Registered User
 
Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 9
From: Aliso Viejo, CA
foofighter is on a distinguished road
Originally Posted by pmeilakjr
I have had both types of racks - roof and hitch. By far the hitch is the way to go!

Can install or remove the hitch rack within one minute - roof rack can take 15-30 minutes because you have to measure where the crossbars go - secure them. then put the faring on, secure it, then put the bike racks on each side, secure them. then you have to lift your bike onto the rack - secure it. oh and make sure you don't drop anything or you could smash your roof / sunroof. Plus the roof rack is noisy with or without bikes, make sure you don't drive into a covered parking garage with your bikes on - end of bikes and racks

After a long hard ride - you don't want to lift the bike up on to the roof. Also, you have to be very careful that the tire does not hit the spoiler if you open the rear hatch.

Not to be negative about roof racks for bikes but I've had them - they suck compared to a nice hitch mount. The Thule t2 works great, takes all of a minute to install then another 15 seconds to put the bike on or off.

www.agees.com/thule/Thule2.htm

Attachment 7500

Attachment 7501

Attachment 7502

Attachment 7503
nice turner
Old October-26th-2007 | 08:50 AM
  #13  
JoshP5's Avatar
Registered User
 
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 837
From: Rockland, Maryville
JoshP5 is on a distinguished road
Damn, your last post was 5 years ago. Lurk much?
Old October-26th-2007 | 12:44 PM
  #14  
foofighter's Avatar
Registered User
 
Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 9
From: Aliso Viejo, CA
foofighter is on a distinguished road
Originally Posted by JoshP5
Damn, your last post was 5 years ago. Lurk much?
yea i do, i have automotive A.D.D. and i always seem to come back to these cars especially now that they have a mazdaspeed version...i need the versatility and the umph to go along w/ that hatch
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
Trent
Mazda3/Mazdaspeed3
2
September-4th-2008 05:44 PM
JDM-P5
Off-Topic
4
August-12th-2005 08:31 AM
mnkyboy
3rd Gen Protege/MazdaSpeed/P5/MP3
14
May-23rd-2003 07:09 PM
crackmunch
3rd Gen Protege/MazdaSpeed/P5/MP3
15
January-27th-2003 10:12 PM
nightowl
Photo and Video Gallery
0
September-9th-2002 07:49 PM

Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 12:35 AM.