Cargo space expansion and management

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Revision as of 14:51, 26 December 2016 by Bosanek (talk | contribs) (Added a chapter about roof racks' prerequisites)
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Introduction

One of Jimny's most significant usability weaknesses is the lack of cargo space.

The trunk is tiny. But even worse, the trunk has no cover, so anyone can see its contents.


There are several solutions to add more cargo space, "extract" more usable space from the existing one, and to hide cargo from public eyes


Solutions for increasing and managing the cargo space

  1. Use a roof box.
  2. Use a towbar mounted box.
  3. Use a suitably sized hard-case bag in the trunk, with sectioned chambers in the bag (similarly like a toolbox).
  4. Use genuine OEM flexible (nylon) rear cargo tray over the folded rear seats. [P.N. 990E0-84A14-000]
  5. Use genuine OEM hard plastic rear cargo tray over the folded rear seats. [P.N. 990E0-81A01-000]
  6. Use genuine OEM hard plastic rear cargo flat tray set over the folder rear seats. [P.N. 990E0-84A30-SET]
  7. Use genuine OEM "cargo area divider" steel grid, which installs vertically behind the rear seats and prevents rear cargo from interfering with the front cabin area. [P.N. 00800-41268-GIT]


Solution #1 prerequisites the use of transversely mounted roof rails (racks). See more below about suitable roof boxes.

Solution #2 might not be legal, or might require the use of additional license plate and brake + turn lights.


Solutions for hiding the cargo

  1. Use genuine OEM sun shade plates for rear windows and side rear windows. [P.N. 990E0-81A00-000]
  2. Apply aftermarked-made tint foils to your rear windows and side rear windows. (caution: might not be legal)
  3. Put the cargo in a roof box.
  4. Put the cargo in a towbar mounted box.
  5. Put a blanket over the cargo in the trunk (bad solution).
  6. Make DIY trunk cover.


Solution #1 might not totally obscure the vision from the outside towards the inside, depending on lightning conditions on the location.

Solution #3 provides the best concealment, but can be quite awkward (roof box is very high up, need to operate it separately from the car's locks, etc.).

Solution #5 might even entice additional curiosity from the viewer.

Solution #6 requires some ingenuity to modify an OEM trunk cover from some other vehicle. One person had good success modifying Ford Ka's OEM trunk cover to suit Jimny.


Regarding roof racks and roof boxes

Prerequisites

The prerequisite for mounting any roof box is having a pair of transversely mounted roof racks (rails).

Most aftermarket-made, Jimny-compatible roof rack models mount on Jimny's longitudinal factory roof rails.


However, all "cabrio" Jimnys and some (mostly low-end) "closed cabin" Jimnys don't have those longitudinal rails. There are no known aftermarket-made transverse roof rails for such Jimnys.


Therefore, if you have a "cabrio" Jimny, or a closed-cabin Jimny without factory longitudinal roof rails, you can not mount roof rails nor a roof box.


Note: If you have a closed cabin Jimny without longitudinal rails, you might be able to transplant the rails from another dead Jimny from a vehicle junkyard (this has not been tried yet). This is certainly not possible on cabrio Jimnys, even with the hard top.


User experiences

Bosanek used Thule "100" ("S") and "200" ("M") size roof boxes on his Jimny.

Thule boxes have several models, but their sizing names are the same across the model range. For example, Ocean 100, Pacific 100, Touring 100, Touring S, Motion S, etc. they are all almost the same size. Sizes 100 and 200 fit great. Size 780 also fits, but looks just a bit bulky. Anything larger than that looks like a boat on the roof.


You can regularly go off road with the roof box on, just bear in mind that your center of gravity is higher with the roof box on (especially with cargo in it). It is important that the box is of high quality so that it can withstand vibration abuse when driving on gravel and off road.


Beware that Jimny is significantly over two meters tall with the roof box on, and you must be careful not to hit a ceiling when entering underground garages! Also warn your mechanic about the height, so he does not hit a ceiling when lifting the car in a service garage.


Regarding towbar mounted boxes

Read the chapter "Cargo Boxes" of the wiki article "Towbar".