A Review
I bought a set of Cajasahel boxes from The Civil One.
Making the decision took some effort as the options are many and varied. Some of the information I could have used in making that decision is missing or hard to find. In an effort to make the decision easier for anyone having the same problems as me, here’s a review of the Cajasahel panniers and a guide to fitting them. He had no idea I was going to do this, the idea came to me after I’d placed the order and before they arrived.
The Ordering Process
Oh ghod, I find this difficult at the best of times and there was
too much choice – this is a personal problem, you may like it. I could have had almost anything I wanted from Civil and he is extremely accommodating when discussing requirements. Unfortunately I get to spend time in front of telephones and computers (without constant interruption) at odd times. As a result all my negotiations with Civil were carried out over a number of days via email and the discussions were broken and extended. I got almost everything I wanted though, but if you want anything other than the standard stuff I strongly recommend talking to the man on the phone.
Civil doesn’t accept credit cards.
What do you get
Well I got a ‘kin huge box.
Extremely well packed with stuff.
With more stuff inside the stuff (so too speak).
The stuff inside the stuff unpacks to give a reasonably interesting spread.
You get two boxes as well. Very solid, very nicely put together and a good coloured finished. Here’s a view of the inside of one of them (with odd bits of polystyrene packaging) showing the quality of the powder coating and the welds. Sorry for the dodgy picture - photographing the inside of a glossy black box in a dark room with flash takes a couple of tries.
Bits and Bobs
This is a clasp. It is mounted with a pair of M5 socket head bolts.
These are held in place with a standard nut and washer. There’s quite a length of thread left inside the box which I took advantage of by adding a Nyloc nut to each thread on the “belt and braces principle”. You need a total of 16 Nyloc nuts for this if you go the same way – Maplin sells them in packs of five. I also used a couple of threads on box and lid to add a retaining cable (see further down). I considered whacking the extra bit off with a Dremel but in the end decided there wasn’t much point.
Fitting and Associated Mucking Around
You may notice that while I got a lot of interesting bits and pieces a set of fitting instructions was conspicuous by their absence. In truth the setup is fairly self explanatory and there isn’t much that can go wrong (except for one thing I haven’t worked out and couldn’t be arsed to ring Civil about on a Sunday afternoon - see
Problem 1 below).
The whole process took me three hours, start to finish. But then again I’m a pernickity cuss and stopped to take photographs and to listen to “Gardener’s Question Time”. I should point out that the latter activity is akin to “Pornography for Eunuchs” as gardening is anathema to me but there is always something bizarre on it to make me shout out “For f**** sake, what a stupid question to ask!”, and a five day weather forecast
The first step is shortening your indicators. The ways are many and varied – I went with Metal Mule on this.
Then lose the existing system case rails and the pillion footrests. No I don’t have the old rails for sale. One had a crack and the other I had to cut off and then welly off a bolt with mole grips. Bloody threadlock. The frames use two of the three mounting points for the system cases (the front point higher of the pair at the back) and the rear footpeg mount point. Here’s the nearside frame in place with the footpeg replaced. If you want to see the before, go take the bits off your own bike. I did photograph it before I fitted the frame but it was pointless. Follow Civil’s instruction to fit it loosely and tighten up once it is aligned and you will have no difficulties. The fit is bloody good anyway. I threadlocked all the bolts when I was happy and tightened ‘em up.
Problem 1.
What to use to mount this and in which order?
Here is the set of bolts for mounting the nearside frame.
My final decision was:
Front, left to right - footpeg mount rear bolt, spacer for front footpeg mount, washer for forward system rail mount point, bolt for forward system rail mount point. Your mileage my vary. In the end I used some stainless socket head bolts of my own in these sizes and replaced a couple of these so I was happier. As I said, I’m a pernickity cuss.
Then stick on the exhaust extension. Still not sure about this. I’ll watch what it does to the running of the engine as I’m used to the idea that exhausts are, at least to an extent, “tuned” to scavenge properly from the cylinders. Whacking another foot on the end can’t be good for it.
These are by no means “quick release” boxes. They hold on with four M10 bolts and the holes are waterproofed by washers of some odd compound I didn’t recognize.
Effective though, three of them fix into threads pre-cut in the frame and the fourth, rearmost, bolt attaches the cross bar which runs between the two cases behind the number plate and is held in place with a Nyloc nut at each end . Again, I threadlocked them and stuck a nyloc nut onto the exposed ends of the forward three bolts. Each side is fixed similarly, I’ve shot pictures indiscriminately from both sides.
Problem 2
What happened to my flat lids?
I asked for flat lids. I didn’t get them. I asked Civil if I had the wrong set but apparently not. Just a cock-up. I actually decided I don’t mind the domed lids in the end. Here they are fitted.
You should note that they don’t touch the rest at the back of the pillion footrest. More space for the pillion.
Handmade boxes – each lid only fits one box, don’t try swapping them between boxes or rotating them front to back on the same side. In my experience they won’t go. For this reason I got me four lengths of nylon coated leader line, made some loops and bolted them onto them spare nuts in both case and lid. When a lid comes off it hangs down the side out of the way to make loading easier. I though of “hinging” it on these but fuggedaboutit. Too much fiddling with overhanging top boxes.
The Finished Article
Solid. I would copy Vern in his avatar and stand on these if I wasn’t (a) a fat bloke and (b) prone to vertigo.
From behind:
From the front with a Ford Fiesta behind mucking it up (terrible picture, concrete’s crap, drive's horrible, fence needs creosoting, etc)
Then a moment of inspiration – 2 wheel humvee’s Tank Stickers!
Even better – the reflective ones!
Created a whole new market there in two pictures!
In summary
Good cases, great build, recommended if you want that sort of thing. Civil isn’t a bad bloke to deal with either. Any questions?
