I did. It was a nice video. I'm not sure I see the purpose of your adding the wings to the sides of the ramp though. It makes it wider, but your bike still isn't getting past the rails of the original ramp. Is it just to give someone more room to walk it up if they wanted?
I tried riding my bike over the lip. It wasn't going over. I think it measures about 10-11" from ground to deck. Ground clearance isn't my problem, but the rear wheel would lose all traction as soon as the front hit the ledge. Maybe with more speed, but I chickened out. I'm not tall enough to be able to lift the front wheel over. Maybe if I wheelied in.
Very astute! That's exactly right. The lawn slopes down towards the camera. Even once on ground, you're still walking a bike backwards down a grassy slope.
But I don't think the ground slope is what made my "ramp" slippery... it was the surface of my dock boards I think, plus the fact that it was so narrow. I had to walk it up the ramp because I'm short. My bike is pretty tall so I have to walk with the bike up the ramp, and that's pretty tight. I think it would have been better if my boards were perpendicular to the direction of travel.
But yeah, that wood is deceivingly slippery. People would wipe out on it in the summer in Crocs if the dock was a little damp.
Ok understood but look at the orientation of the wood boards in my ramp, then look at the orientation of the wood boards in yours.
Are you using your ramp so the wood boards for parallel with the bike or perpendicular to it?
Ok mine, everything goes perpendicular to the bike. Lines and holes are there on both the wood ramp I made and the cargo truck ramp both going perpendicular to the bike.
Based on your description I'm wondering if you're using your ramp the long way and your boards are running parallel to the bike. If so, that's why you have no grip and it feels slidy. You're giving it a long smooth surface, instead of a bunch of on and off surfaces for it to keep getting traction, and stop sliding, on.
If you're going the long way down your ramp, you've essentially made a fun slide, more than you've made a cargo ramp.
Try the short way across your ramp. It should feel much better.
If the short way still feels slippery, sometimes you honestly just need to let it and don't fight it because if you're going the short way across your ramp your rear tire will hit ground before the bike can get too sideways.
The reason I added the side extensions on my long ramp is because I'm coming down (or up) 6 ft in the air...on a 19 ft long ramp, it takes a few seconds to ride up or down, so with the side extensions if my dog or a tenant decided to run in the way, I can stop mid ramp and put both feet down.