โDec-16-2018 07:08 AM
โDec-18-2018 01:53 PM
โDec-18-2018 07:41 AM
Bedlam wrote:
These dollies were more common when people used to tow with sedans:
http://www.airforums.com/forums/f464/slimp-dolly-44260.html
โDec-18-2018 06:15 AM
โDec-18-2018 06:02 AM
carringb wrote:There's a considerable pile of rules and regulations that apply to commercial rigs that don't apply to civil vehicles. I have read that if the truck didn't come with it from the factory, then it is a trailer. Just what I read at some point. But it varies from state to state.fj12ryder wrote:
Wonder if that would fall under the heading of a double tow?
No. Converter dollies don't count as a trailer. Otherwise you'd have to call double semi-trailers triple towing, and triple-trailer semis quintuple towing.
PS - I saw a Freightliner M2 4x4 pickup driving through downtown Portland with an Automated Safety hitch. The bedsides on that thing are about 6-feet high, so using one of those is the only way possible to tow a fifth wheel with one of those rigs.
โDec-18-2018 05:38 AM
โDec-17-2018 08:55 PM
fj12ryder wrote:
Wonder if that would fall under the heading of a double tow?
โDec-17-2018 07:05 PM
โDec-17-2018 05:59 PM
drsteve wrote:
I wonder how much tongue weight this rig puts on the truck, and how stable it tows.
โDec-17-2018 04:29 PM
โDec-17-2018 04:23 PM
โDec-17-2018 01:08 PM
mowermech wrote:
Not everybody has or wants a truck. What if you have a 3/4 ton Suburban, and find a smokin' good deal on a fifth wheel?
How about a one ton van?
With one of these dollys, no problem. SUV or van can tow a fiver!
โDec-17-2018 12:05 PM
Walaby wrote:
I guess one would have to ask... Why???
Mike
โDec-17-2018 10:09 AM
Walaby wrote:
I guess one would have to ask... Why???
Mike
โDec-16-2018 06:21 PM