Frankfurt Airport & Bike Boxes - CycleBlaze

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Frankfurt Airport & Bike Boxes

Bob Raynard

For years my wife and I have bought bike boxes at Frankfurt airport to ship our bikes home.  It was convenient, and the boxes were of adequate size.  Although not very sturdy, the boxes got our bikes home with minimal damage.

On our last trip, we realized the boxes had undergone a redesign, and are smaller and even less sturdy.  The box now gets sealed on the end rather than the top/bottom, meaning there is now only one layer of cardboard on the top and bottom.  (Watch your forks dig into that tiny layer of cardboard as you try to slide your bike in.  Height and length remain very satisfactory, but the box is so narrow that it is touch and go if a bike with wide forks or bottom bracket will even fit without distorting the box.  There is not room for your front wheel to slide into the box after your bike is in.  The wheel has to slide in with the rest of your bike. 

Once we had our bikes sealed up in their boxes, we put them on a luggage cart and my wife's box sagged over the rails of the luggage cart, the bottom was so flimsy.

When we sealed the boxes, I noticed that they no longer had handhold holes in them.  Naïve me, I was encouraged by their absence; it took out the weak point the holes create, and without them the boxes are awkward enough it will take two people to carry them.

Ha!  Silly me!  Based on the holes in the boxes, it would appear the baggage handlers have learned they can just punch, or cut, their own hole in the box and carry them that way.  Alternately, they  can just drag your box - quite a way if the amount my wife's handlebar coupling was ground down is an indicator.  When we got home my wife's bike needed a new rotor for her front brake it was bent so bad.

From this I learned two things.  First, try to avoid buying these inadequate boxes at FRA.  If your hotel will store the box you flew your bikes over with, that would be great.  If not, we have dealt with Fahrrad Kuchler in Morfelden, just south of the airport, on another matter, and can report they are used to catering to cycle touring foreigners, and speak excellent English.  When I asked the fellow we dealt with last week (Wolfgang) about using one of their bike boxes, his greatest concern was the large size of the boxes he had on hand, so you will want to know how large a bike box your airline will carry.  Air Canada uses the sum of the height width and length.  Remember, in Europe they only work in centimetres.  Wolfgang indicated that they routinely put bike boxes in cargo taxis to people's hotels.  (But not the airport, it is too hard to connect with people)

If you want to email Fahrrad Kuchler, go to their website and use the email form you find there.  Before I made contact with Fahrrad Kuchler I emailed several other bike shops and heard nothing, and emailing Kuchler likewise gets no reply.  I believe there is some form of filter that decides an email from North America must be spam.

Unfortunately, Morfelden is not on the same S-Bahn line as the airport, so carrying an empty box on the S-Bahn isn't really very convenient.  The S-Bahn from the airport goes on to Russelshiem, where Alls Fahrrad is a short walk from the S-Bahn station, but I know nothing about them.

My second take away from our unfortunate experience, is that if you have to buy the boxes at the airport, try to rig up some form of handle to tape to the outside of the box.  The purchase price of the box includes a roll of packing tape, so if you can tape some kind of handle to the box, the baggage handlers will use that rather than make their own handles by punching holes in the box, and perhaps they will carry the boxes rather than drag them.

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1 year ago
Brent IrvineTo Bob Raynard

A few years ago I tried something new-to -me. At the end of the tour I picked up a roll of plastic wrap at a grocery store and once the bike was in its box, I wrapped it in the film. Vertically, horizontally... over and over, and around and around for the entire roll. The box was bulletproof. Maybe that would help these boxes.

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1 year ago
Bob RaynardTo Brent Irvine

That is an interesting idea, Brent.  It took me a minute to realize you were referring to plate-sized plastic wrap sold for food preservation.  While I still prefer using a higher quality box, the former science teacher in me is curious about how the baggage handlers would treat a plastic wrapped bike box, one that was no longer possible to just punch a hole through.  I am also wondering if the plastic would provide enough support that it would work to cut hand holds in the plastic wrapped cardboard, giving people an easier way to carry the box.  

If nothing else, the plastic wrapping would result in smaller holes in the box.  In addition to the bike, I also put the front racks that came off, a helmet, and a handlebar bag containing the little bits that came off during the airport disassembly, like pedals, bolts for mounting the front rack and the yoke mounting the handlebars.  As you saw in the photo, the holes were big enough those things could have fallen out in transit.

Sadly, I think the bent rotor on my wife's bike was solely a result of the narrow box.  Even putting the wheel in rotor side in left it vulnerable to being squeezed against the bike frame.  If I ever have to implement your solution I will also take the rotor off at the airport.

At one point there was a small grocery store in the basement of Frankfurt airport, so your soluton could be very easy to implement.

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1 year ago
Kelly IniguezTo Bob Raynard

Bob,

Thank you for posting this specific information. We are looking at finishing a tour in either Munich or Frankfurt next summer. I especially appreciate you mentioning a specific bike shop. We have only ridden one European tour. We had a very easy time of it, with a hotel that provided a shuttle that would take our bike boxes, and a shop that was within walking and carry a bike box distance. It could have only been better if the hotel shuttle would have dropped us at the bike shop, but you can't have everything.  We are hoping to find a similar trifecta for this tour. 

Kelly

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3 months ago
Suzanne GibsonTo Kelly Iniguez

Hi Kelly, if you are finishing in Munich, don't hesitate to contact me. I won't be much help providing information on finding boxes, etc. though since living here we have never had to do that. Other people on CB will be better informed than I am (Patrick O'Hara and Susan Carpenter, for example). Have fun planning your tour!

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3 months ago
Bob RaynardTo Kelly Iniguez

Hi Kelly,

Thank you for your kind words.  While we were in Morfeldon, we stayed at the Hotel Tommasi.  The hotel was fine, but we were very disappointed by their lack of bike storage.  The owner had us put our bikes in an open garage,one on either side of a car already parked in the garage.  There was nothing for us to lock our bikes to, and the owner promised us he would close the overhead door later.

When we returned to the hotel after supper, the overhead door was still open, so we moved our bikes to a second, and empty, garage and locked them together.  The overhead doors to both garages were open all night.

If you decide to give Tommasi a try, email the hotel ahead of time and see if they can promise you better storage.  

Good luck.

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3 months ago
Jacquie GaudetTo Bob Raynard

Just seeing this now, thanks to a new comment.  We used boxes for our first big trip involving bikes on airplanes in 1992 and I well remember our panic about finding boxes at CDG.  We had spent some of our time in Paris looking unsuccessfully for a bike shop but somehow had been told they were available at the airport.  We weren't sure what we would do if they weren't, but luckily they were available (and even free, if memory serves).  They were huge, only needing the pedals removed and handlebars turned, and didn't even trigger oversize fees!  We stored those boxes at home for years against a future trip, but they were long gone by our next flying-with-bikes trip in 2015.

On that trip, I had my coupled bike with S&S case and Al had a borrowed Thule rigid case.  Both were a pain to pack and the Thule case was hard to manage and so big it had to go on the roof of our SUV to get to the airport.  I don't think we could have managed two.

Fast-forward to our recent trips and we both use collapsible Thule cases.  They are so much easier to move around and to store (at home or at a hotel) that I can't see ever going back to cardboard.  We do, however, remove the brake rotors when packing our bikes.

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3 months ago
Wayne EstesTo Bob Raynard

I have flown many times with a boxed bike, going back to the ancient days when U.S. airlines sold giant bicycle boxes. Those boxes were single thickness corrugated that is too flimsy for such a large box. At the destination those boxes inevitably had large tears in the carrying handles and other large holes, so I knew not to put loose small parts in the box.

I haven't flown in several years, but for my most recent flights I obtained a box from the body shop of a local car dealer. There I can easily find giant boxes made from double-thick corrugated that is very strong and stiff. I cut down a box to make a clamshell box that fits snugly around my bike. The clamshell design makes all the edges have two layers of double-thick corrugated. That makes the box extremely stiff. I also reinforce the carrying handles with tape to make them resistant to tearing. Here's a photo of a custom clamshell box that looks intact after being handled at 3 airports.

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3 months ago
Kelly IniguezTo Suzanne Gibson

Suzanne,

Thank you for reaching out. At the moment, the penciled plans are to ride from Barcelona to Venice via a route that is largely from Scott Anderson. He has been a real trooper. From Venice, I would like to follow the Claudia Augusta. If we follow it to the end, we bypass Munich, and could finish in Frankfurt with little effort. Or, we could swing back to Munich. At the moment I'm watching airfares. They are quite similar, so that isn't of much help.

Kelly

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3 months ago
Kelly IniguezTo Bob Raynard

Bob,

The Tommasi doesn't seem to take good care of their bicycle riding customers. We kept our bikes in a variety of locations on our month long tour last summer. All were sufficiently safe. Some were more convenient than others. Of course, my favorite was the few times we were told to take our bikes into the room. I was most surprised in Segovia, where we were splurging at the San Antonio, a former monastery, converted to upscale lodging. The check in clerk said of course we should take the bikes to our room. I agree, of course!

Kelly

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3 months ago