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laser transport costs

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Mark Antony View Drop Down
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    Posted: 30 Sep 12 at 4:29pm
A question for the more technical / practical minded people.

Is it more fuel economical to transport a laser by trailer or on the roof?

By trailer you've got the extra dead weight, but it travels in the cars slipstream; and vice versa for the roof - less weight but greater wind resistance.

Which is cheaper in these £1.40+ per litre days?
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Post Options Post Options   Quote NickM Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 30 Sep 12 at 5:16pm
Good question.  On the basis of no technical knowledge at all I would guess trailing is better.  A laser & trailer is pretty light and I have always found that having something on the roof really knocks petrol consumption.  (It probably also depends on the size of car and consumption: a Laser on top of a LR Disco it would be a lower increase in total wind resistance than on top of a Fiesta, but then trailing a Laser behind a Disco would probably not add much to a heavy MPG anyway.)
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Post Options Post Options   Quote radixon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 30 Sep 12 at 5:47pm
I'd say trailering is more fuel economical, however, the price of a road base and tow hitch will far outweigh the fuel cost. 

So if it was once or twice a year, roof rack is cheaper but would require a lift from a passerby.


Edited by radixon - 30 Sep 12 at 5:48pm
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JimC View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote JimC Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 30 Sep 12 at 6:17pm
Difficult to call. There's the rolling resistance from the tyres as well. One thing for sure though, if you stick to the applicable speed limits (50mph for trailer, 70mph for roof rack) I bet the trailer is cheaper!

Edited by JimC - 30 Sep 12 at 6:18pm
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Rupert View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Rupert Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 30 Sep 12 at 6:32pm
60mph for trailer where it is 70 for the roof rack, Jim!

You are right, though, the trailer is more economical. Even when maybe not quite sticking to the exact letter of the law... Not me, of course, just an aquaintance...
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Graham T Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 30 Sep 12 at 6:40pm
A couple of weeks ago I trailed one of the club 5m patrol RIB's via a mixture of A roads and country roads up to the club and averaged 39 MPG. The next day I did the same route with a windsurfer on the roof and got 37 mpg. I was surprised at the difference considering the weight of the boat I was towing.

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Mark Antony View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Mark Antony Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 30 Sep 12 at 9:38pm
Originally posted by Graham T

A couple of weeks ago I trailed one of the club 5m patrol RIB's via a mixture of A roads and country roads up to the club and averaged 39 MPG. The next day I did the same route with a windsurfer on the roof and got 37 mpg. I was surprised at the difference considering the weight of the boat I was towing.



That's seems quite a killer argument. It looks like the trailer wins on cost.
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Mark Antony View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Mark Antony Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 11 Mar 13 at 5:14pm
By way of an update on this, I've recently completed two 270+ miles journeys with the laser: one on a trailer, the other on the roof.

trailer: 53 mpg
roof: 48 mpg
Readouts from trip computer on 2.0 TDI VW.

Not exactly under controlled conditions, and the VW readouts always tend towards the generous side, but they do provide relative values.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote jeffers Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 12 Mar 13 at 8:02am
I towed a Scorpion from East Anglia to Wales and found it had very little effect on the fuel mileage I got. The same the following year in a different car (1.4 petrol as opposed to 2.0 diesel) when I towed it to Dorset.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 12 Mar 13 at 9:19am
I have found trailing to hardly affect the consumption of my diesel Passat at all, but if you are starting from scratch you'd need to do a lot of miles to make the trailer, hitch and lighting board pay for a Laser.

Just done a quick sum. At those fuel consumptions (48 and 53mpg), you need to cover 42,854 miles to get payback on £600 worth of trailer (assuming fuel is £1.45 a litre).
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