Home > General & Technical (L663) > Towing a car on a dolly. |
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Retroanaconda Member Since: 04 Jan 2012 Location: Scotland Posts: 2637 |
A dolly means the car becomes a trailer, and so as it's over 750kg the rear wheels (and dolly wheels) would need to be braked. Usually done through one of those linked brake systems that people use to tow a small car behind a motorhome on a dolly.
Putting it on a proper trailer will be much easier. |
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12th Nov 2024 10:25pm |
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Bluest Member Since: 23 Apr 2016 Location: Lancashire Posts: 4205 |
If you aren't using the dolly for recovery then it'll need some sort of functioning brake system that operates both the dolly and the car brakes as the two together are a trailer. I dont know if that sort of thing exists or not. Taking a vehicle for repair isn't recovery. 2007 110 TDCi Station Wagon XS
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12th Nov 2024 10:33pm |
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blackwolf Member Since: 03 Nov 2009 Location: South West England Posts: 17352 |
The only occasion when a dolly is legal now is to recover a road-legal vehicle which has broken down on the road to the nearest place of safety. Ergo setting off from a safe place is not legal. Use a trailer, it is the only legal option (other than a flatbed).
Cars towed by motorhomes don't use dollies, they use A-frames. These are probably illegal although no-one seems sure and there is presently no case law to establish precedent. What is beyond doubt is that on a A-frames all wheels.pf the towed car must brake, the brakes must meet the requirements for braking efficiency (which could be a problem if it has a servo), and must auto-reverse. |
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12th Nov 2024 10:38pm |
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