Post
by yappaty »
Tue Apr 08, 2008 9:12 pm
I did a similar thing a couple of years ago, using an Oxford TerraForce anchor. My bike was parked on a strip of land beside my house, which I had laid paving slabs on.
I moved one pair of adjacent slabs about the same width apart as the eye of the anchor, then dug a large hole underneath the slabs, filled it with several bags of ready mixed fence post mix (the stuff with aggregate) and stuck the anchor into it.
To make it harder for someone to attack it directly or break it out I recessed the eye so that the top was level with the top of the slabs, smoothing the concrete into a gentle slope from the edges of the slabs down to the eye of the anchor (and including a hole for rudimentary drainage). This had the added benefit of making it much easier to feed the chain into the eye of the anchor.
On a side note, I had a couple of expensive mountain bikes in a shed that I needed to secure, so I filled a tall plastic bin with concrete (reinforced with chicken wire) and put an anchor in the top of that. I think it weighed about 75kg. On the advice of my insurers I then got 4 hefty L brackets, screwed them into each side at the base and then screwed them into a thick piece of plywood that was wider than the door to the shed (so it couldn't be slid out of the door). And just to be safe I drilled out the screw heads. It survived one attempted theft (they went for the lock instead of the anchor and failed miserably) and took me about 2 hours to take apart when I moved house.
Have fun :)