Welle417
New member
- 10
- 0
- 0
- Location
- Anchorage, Alaska
I recently changed from the 37" Run-flats to some stock Chevy Silverado rims and times (245/75/16), mainly because i'm about to do about 3900 miles of highway from Alaska through Canada.
With that, I needed a way to not clutter the trailer with a spare. I didn't want to shell out the money for a stock Silverado crank (even junk yard pulls in AK are extremely pricey) and I didn't like the idea of mounting it on the side. With all that space under the rear, i decided to devise something. So after laying under there for about 10 minutes holding the spare, I decided on a rough plan.
After a walk through the hardware section of ACE I pretty much settled it in my mind that this was the way I wanted to go.
3 ea 1/2" carriage bolts for the 3 lug points (stainless or galvanized) - I did mine @6" long, this worked out perfectly to allow enough room for hooking the carrier on and then tightening it all down via wing nuts.
3 ea accompanying hex nuts and wing nuts.
2 ea 3/8 in eyelets - I cut these with a dremel disc to have an angled profile that just slides over the galvanized pipe that I chose.
2 ea hex nuts/washers/nylon lock nuts. - I used these through my plywood discs to set the level of the hooks and hold them very solidly.
3 ea cone washers (found them in the toilet repair section of ACE) - they say 1/2" but they barely fit - might need to drill them out slightly- but they work great at squeezing into the lug holes.
ALSO 3 EA Nylon washers - I picked these up after I realized that the wing nuts were difficult to thread against the rubber cone washers. With these between them it is a much easier task.
I then used some 3/4 ply (8 in disc) and a few wood screws to sandwich it all - this would vary depending on the style and shape of the rim that you have.
So far I've spent less than 50 bucks on parts and used scrap pieces of wood. The most expensive things were the stainless carriage bolts and all the clevis pins I grabbed to try.
UPDATE: Here it is, all finished.
Cheers.
Last edited: