Tom brought me a three crossbar set of Quik N Easy roof racks I made for his big Ford van a couple decades ago.
Quote:
This is what happens to wood crossbars if you leave them on your van for 20 years and never revarnish them.
P7020014 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
The SS eye bolts, exposed for 20 years and still unrusty, were worth saving. That is good stainless.
P7050002 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
None of the Q&E towers were worth salvaging, the tightening levers had long ago frozen in place. If only Tom had bought a half dozen new levers 10 years ago.
P7050003 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
If only Tom had bothered to install those new levers.
I managed to remove two of the six Quik N Easy towers and most of the high quality stainless steel eye bolts. Everything else was impossibly seized and I gave up, tossing the crossbars on the dump-bound debris rack behind the shed. And a week later brought them back into the shop. I don’t like making dump runs, and I don’t give up that easily.
A little Sawzall action on the wood on either side of the rusty carriage bolts, a smack with a 3lb mallet and I had all four of the remaining towers off.
P7120009 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
The Sharpie outline around the carriage bolt head marks the top of the Quik n Easy tower below, so I didn’t cut too far towards center.
P7120010 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
The rusted clip locking levers on all six towers were 100% frozen. Six snips with bolt cutters left me with this detritus.
P7130011 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
The rusty carriage bolts in four of the towers were well and truly seized. A spritz and soak with PB Blaster and a 14” crescent wrench did nothing. Adding a breaker bar to the wrench did nothing except show that I need a larger vice. Dammit Tom, this is why you can’t have nice things.
The Sawzall was still on the bench. I will not be defeated.
P7130012 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Sometimes a Sawzall is the answer. Sometimes a Sawzall is the only answer. The Sawzalling got easier once I put in a sharp blade. (Buy new Sawzall blades dummy)
The naked towers are still solid, just ugly as hell. Half are missing their vinyl foot pads and the other three pads are falling apart and not far behind.
P7130013 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
I think . . . .maybe . . . yes! I have replacement Quik N Easy vinyl foot pads, extras bought years ago when replacing worn pads on our 4-crossbar van racks. Wonder of wonders, the pads weren’t even hard to find. In a small box marked spare rack parts; I knew I had them somewhere and I had prepared (and fortified) myself for a much long search.
P7140014 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
To degrunge the aluminum towers I tried a spray of 50/50 lemon juice and vinegar, let sit for 10 minutes, scrub clean. I use vinegar to etch aluminum before painting, the addition of lemon juice greatly reduces the pervasive cat-piss smell of pure vinegar in the shop.
P7140015 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
That solution usually does an acceptable job of cleaning old aluminum. 20-year-old towers, never removed from the van rain gutters, not so much. In for a penny, in to brush on a coat of Burnshine aluminum brightener, let sit and rinse it off. That rarely used jar of Burnshine is at least as old as those racks. Still works well, and that’s more like it; not shiny, but no longer as badly discolored.
I’ll give “Patented Quik-N-Easy Products Monrovia California” this much, their sliver and blue foil labels were made to last. 20 years of van top exposure, vinegar/lemon sprayed and aluminum brightenered, still there. Those are some hellacious durable labels. With a tiny bit of routine maintenance, the towers too are made to last.
New old stock plastic shoes glued on, new old stock clips and levers installed (thanks Tom), six like new Quik n Easy towers and a pile of 316 marine stainless steel eye bolts, nuts and washers and lock washers. Each one of those large 316 SS eye bolts with associated hardware is probably $10. Thanks Tom, $80 worth of quality stainless steel. It was mine once, it is again.
P7150019 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
The six refurbished Quik n Easy Towers are useful only to someone whose vehicle has rain gutters. Like our 2000 Ford E-150. But we already have eight Quick n Easy crossbars, one 8’ long quad set up to accommodate four canoes, the other to accommodate four decked canoes.
P7150023 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
P7150020 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Having NOT been left on the van for 20 years those racks are still solid, functional, and un-rusted. Tom did not comprehend that Quik N Easy meant “quick and easy to put on and take off”.
Maybe those salvaged towers are not as useless as I thought. Apparently Quik N Easy racks are still popular with vintage SUV and station wagon aficionados, and other folks who want period-correct roof racks to go with their classic ride. A Ford Country Squire or Buick Estate would look ludicrous with Yakima towers and bars.
Want that classic rack look with your classic ride?
https://sweetpatina.bigcartel.com/produ ... ack-mountsGood lord, a set of six Quik n Easys, just like the six I salvaged, available for a mere $525! Maybe there is a resale market. If I ever sell the old Ford the sixteen Quik N Easy towers on those eight crossbars may be worth more than the van.
Once refurbished I was planning to put the salvaged towers up for free on a canoe club board. Or not, most paddlers have newer vehicles with no rain gutters, and use modern roof rack systems that need no DIY.
Mini-rant. I miss rain gutters. And, dating myself, I miss side vent windows and giant not-a-screen push buttons on the car radio. I could find those big push buttons Braille-like with just my fingertip, without so much as glancing away from the road. Try that with a display screen. Mini rant over.
Back to the salvaged Quik-N-Easy’s, no doubt there are forums for vintage Land Cruisers or classic station wagons.
I’d beat the going price and even throw in some time-tested 316 stainless eye bolts. I don’t enjoy selling stuff, but it would be worth it to tell Tom I sold his junk for X hundred dollars.