Sliding Bike Rack using GearBlocks Swivel Hooks with Curved Strut Channels

evaluating the size of the bearings

The First Question (About a Year Ago)

About a year ago, a customer named Patrick reached out to Gearโ€‘Blocks with an interesting question:

Could Gearโ€‘Blocks hooks work on curved Unistrut?

Patrick was specifically looking at a 3โ€‘foot radius curved Unistrut section, available from McMasterโ€‘Carr:

At the time, this was unexplored territory for us. After reviewing the geometry and thinking through how the hooks roll and articulate, we came to a clear conclusion:

The existing hooks were simply too wide to navigate the curve.

The rollers would bind, and the hook geometry didnโ€™t allow enough clearance to smoothly follow the arc. We shared this assessment with Patrick, and while it wasnโ€™t the answer he was hoping for, it planted an important seed.


A Second Attempt โ€” and a New Variable (2 Months Ago)

Fastโ€‘forward roughly ten months.

Another customer, Joe, reached out with a very similar ideaโ€”again involving curved Unistrut. This time, however, Gearโ€‘Blocks had something new in the lineup: the swivel hooks.

With the swivel hooks in mind, the question became:

Does the added articulation change the outcome?

After several rounds of backโ€‘andโ€‘forth with Joeโ€”discussing dimensions, clearances, and likely failure pointsโ€”we again reached the same fundamental conclusion:

Even with the swivel design, the hooks were still too wide to comfortably make the turn.

At leastโ€ฆ asโ€‘designed.


The Lateโ€‘Night Idea

After a few nights of thinking (and sleeping) on the problem, Brian had a realization:

What if the issue wasnโ€™t the hook design itselfโ€”but the size of the internal components?

evaluating the size of the bearings

The swivel hooks rely on bearings and roll pins. By reducing:

  • The bearing width
  • The rollโ€‘pin width

โ€ฆthe overall profile of the hook could be made just slim enough to clear the curve.

This idea was shared with Joe, along with a caveat: this would be experimental.

Joe was immediately on board.


Handsโ€‘On Testing

Joe assembled a small batch of modified swivel hooks, using:

  • Smaller bearings
  • Shorter roll pins

These samples were sent to Joe with the understanding that heโ€™d test them in the real worldโ€”and document the process along the way.

Joe got to work, carefully installing the hooks on the curved strut, taking photos, and noting how the system behaved at each step.


The Christmas Break Message 🎄

Over Christmas break, Brian received a message from Joe. After some clever alignment of the strut with brackets and shims the straights and curved struts were mounted.

bracket with shims to align straight section with curved strut
straight to curve section zoomed out

The verdict?

โ€œVery happy. The smaller bearings and shorter pins worked like a champ.โ€

Bikes stored on straight and curved strut with modified GearBlocks Hooks

The hooks rolled smoothly through the curve, maintained stability, and performed exactly as hoped.

Not only did the system workโ€”but Joe was confident enough to order additional hooks for his setup.


Project Complete

About a week ago, Joe followed up once more:

  • The project was complete
  • The system was working great
  • The curved Unistrut setup was fully operational
bikes stored close up

And then came the question that brought everything full circle:

โ€œYou should consider supplying hooks with the smaller bearings.  They seem fine in the straight track, and work well in the curve.โ€

Joe sliding bikes

We think he might be right.

Let us know what you think!