Note: Guitar Ted bought the Kuat Piston Pro car rack and is not being paid, nor bribed for this review. All opinions are Guitar Ted's
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| Your welcome when opening up the box |
The key feature here is the two-tool assembly and the simplicity of the process. There are a couple of steps which make doing the job a bit easier. I'll get around to this in this article.
I didn't strictly time myself, but I 'think' this took about a half an hour from unboxing to finished, usable rack. This should give you somewhat of an idea of how easy the process is of assembling the rack.
As with many items these days the instructions are online. I get how this may be a negative for some who would rather look at a piece of paper. However; the QR code works, the online instructions are clear and easy to read, and there is also a video for those who learn better by seeing.
In defense of electronic, online instructions I will say this. They are paper-less. Good for the environment? Possibly. But they save money for consumers, and they are immediately updatable. The latter is shown in this example: The retaining arms are marked in increments reflecting the popular wheel sizes of 29"/700c, 27.5", and 26" wheel diameters. But the online instructions already say this rack is compatible with the new 32" wheels. Furthermore the online instructions indicated a running change would be made to the printed wheel size indications on the rack in the future.
Obviously this would be impossible to communicate had the rack shipped with printed instructions. So, I appreciated this information and gaining the understanding my rack is "future-proofed" should I decide to get a 32"er. (Also - It pays to read the instructions first.....sometimes!)
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| The box is rather large and heavy. I recommend two people handle it. |
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| Contents of said box.The bag has the tools in it. |
Assembly:
After unboxing the Piston Pro the instructions indicate that it is easier to assemble the rack if you put the receiver end into your hitch first. This is true in practice and what I did. However; the receiver comes out of the box in the "folded up" position, and this is not ideal.
I would recommend the first thing you do would be to put on the Foot Lever Assembly first, then you can release the Center Beam into a horizontal position. This makes everything else go a lot smoother.
But if your Piston Pro is like mine, you still have to do one other thing before mounting the Center Beam into your receiver hitch. That would be to take the 8mm safety hex key and loosen the nut in the end of the Center Beam which will allow the Flatlock Cam to retreat into the beam and allow you to push the beam into your receiver hitch. THEN you can tighten the hex nut until the Center Beam is secured.
Next I'd go ahead and follow the instructions for putting the trays on, but it is a bit easier to do if you remove the safety tabs which hold the OneTap buttons in place and tap these open to allow the retention arms to swing up and out of the way. Be careful not to get bonked on the noggin when releasing the retention arms!
Otherwise I have no quibbles with the instructions. The assembly is super-easy, in my opinion. You could use a torque wrench, as everything has torque specs, (kudos to Kuat for this), but if you do not have a torque wrench just be careful. I don't think you could over-torque the two tray bolts with the provided 8mm hex key, but just use caution and maybe check on the torque values later when you can get around a torque wrench.
Impressions:
Yeah, this is a simple to use rack. I recall the old Thule T2 Pro and its release lever. I used to have to lift, jiggle, and futz around with it to move it out of the way when accessing the lift gate. The Kuat works so much better.
I have to hand it to Kuat for informing buyers via the online portal that this rack will work with a 32"er. Not that I am getting one......yet. Maybe someday. But if I do? I have a rack for that, which is nice to know.
The Piston Pro with its trick, one touch opening retaining arms is fun, and should make mounting a bike a breeze. I can offset bikes as well simply by maneuvering the retention arms and offsetting the bikes in the trays. This is a cool feature. The old Thule had a fixed bike placement and that was the only option you had to carry a bike.
The Kuat rack isn't necessarily a whole lot lighter than a Thule T2. Maybe somewhat, but it still is an awkward thing to carry alone. It wasn't terrible, but I wouldn't want a flimsy rack either, so....
Next thing to do will be to get some bikes on there and go somewhere to ride. Stay tuned....



























