number-1
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posted on 10/6/13 at 04:41 PM |
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Using the car as a trailer....
After reading bi22les post re trailers, Mark Chandler suggested using the car as the trailer, and make a T bar...i think most of its covered in the
thread where puma931 made one
If im right, the trailer wheel mounting plates are welded to the underside of the car at the desired location, You jack the car up and bolt on the
wheels. Same for the draw bar. As the car wheels are off the ground theres no need for it to be road legal
http://www.locostbuilders.co.uk/viewthread.php?tid=169595&page=2
Has anyone else done this? Any pics of each step? Does anyone plan to do it? Ive got limited room and cant have a trailer. I need something that i can
store at the back of the garage and use on the odd trackday. Trailer hire is a pain.
This is a proper locost idea and could help a few of us out
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40inches
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posted on 10/6/13 at 04:55 PM |
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You could buy a towing A frame and fit it to the front wishbones, or make mounting plates to attach it to. RECOVERY A FRAME TOWING
DOLLY TRAILER TOW BAR 1.8t. | eBay
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mark chandler
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posted on 10/6/13 at 05:18 PM |
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I was suggesting making a T frame so the car sits upon this, not welding plates to the car, bolting suspension to the car would be a lot of work and
add the enemy, weight!
So make something like this that the car sits upon
Snipe boat trailer suit 16ft boat | eBay
Regards Mark
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scimjim
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posted on 10/6/13 at 05:18 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by 40inches
You could buy a towing A frame and fit it to the front wishbones, or make mounting plates to attach it to. RECOVERY A FRAME TOWING
DOLLY TRAILER TOW BAR 1.8t. | eBay
if the vehicles wheels are on the deck, it needs to be road legal. If it weighs over 750Kg, it needs to have functional brakes (as a trailer, not a
car ) unbraked dollies can only legally be used to recover a broken down vehicle to a place of safety.
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scimjim
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posted on 10/6/13 at 05:21 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by mark chandler
I was suggesting making a T frame so the car sits upon this, not welding plates to the car, bolting suspension to the car would be a lot of work and
add the enemy, weight!
So make something like this that the car sits upon
Snipe boat trailer suit 16ft boat | eBay
Regards Mark
you can't build a trailer after 29 Oct 2012 without getting it type approved
of course - how they can prove when it was built, if it's not type approved, is anyone's guess
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andy996tt
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posted on 10/6/13 at 05:22 PM |
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Was also looking into this. Hiring trailers is a pain.
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number-1
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posted on 10/6/13 at 05:35 PM |
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The trouble with the boat trailer T bar idea is room.....i dont have it. If i did id buy a car trailer. I need something that can be taken and left at
the back of the garage when its not needed
Im sure there must be a few track only cars on this forum who dont have the room for a trailer, or the wife doesnt want to look at one?
The hassle and time of having to go and collect the trailer the day before, annoying the neighbors with finding somewhere to leave it overnight,
loading it up, tie down straps, the extra weight of towing, doing the track day then doing everything in reverse...its time consuming and at £50-60 a
pop it can hit the pocket.
With the idea of using the car as the trailer frame it cuts out the hassle of the above. In fact, the car can be left on the set up after the track
day in the garage to cut down on loading/unloading
Re building a trailer after Oct 2012....the car is the trailer so its built in 1967
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mark chandler
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posted on 10/6/13 at 05:54 PM |
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T bar breaks down into a couple of pieces, by mounting the suspension units on a seperate axle you do not need to screw around with the car.
Also as a seperate item you are loading your car on to the trailer, this could be significant for insurance?
As a side note I made my trailer based upon the footprint of my car so it could remained parked on the trailer when in my garage without taking up any
additional room. Infact it provides a decent height working platform.
Trailer front side view
Tilts for easy loading
Trailer tilted
[Edited on 10/6/13 by mark chandler]
[Edited on 10/6/13 by mark chandler]
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snakebelly
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posted on 10/6/13 at 06:03 PM |
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Not cheap but a nice solution
https://sites.google.com/site/allytrailergbbo00/
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big_wasa
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posted on 10/6/13 at 06:41 PM |
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^^ That looks smart but you have a max usable weight of 590kg with many cec locosts getting near that. And there still isn't that many cars that
will tow an un-braked 750kg trailer.
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40inches
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posted on 10/6/13 at 06:57 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by scimjim
quote: Originally posted by 40inches
You could buy a towing A frame and fit it to the front wishbones, or make mounting plates to attach it to. RECOVERY A FRAME TOWING
DOLLY TRAILER TOW BAR 1.8t. | eBay
if the vehicles wheels are on the deck, it needs to be road legal. If it weighs over 750Kg, it needs to have functional brakes (as a trailer, not a
car ) unbraked dollies can only legally be used to recover a broken down vehicle to a place of safety.
Only if it's a Dolly. If it's an "A" frame, the car and "A" frame become a trailer, according to the DOT:
“A”- Frames
When an "A" frame is attached to a vehicle (e.g. a motor car) and towed by a motor vehicle (e.g. motorhome) we believe the "A"
frame and car become a single unit and as such are classified in legislation as a trailer. As a consequence the car and “A”-frame are required to meet
the technical requirements for trailers when used on the road in Great Britain. These requirements are contained within the Road Vehicles
(Construction and Use) Regulations 1986 (SI 1986/1078) as amended (C&U) and the Road Vehicles Lighting Regulations 1989 (SI 1989/1796) as amended
(RVLR).
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number-1
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posted on 10/6/13 at 07:05 PM |
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Heres a few pics of the one made by puma931
[Edited on 10/6/13 by number-1]
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scimjim
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posted on 10/6/13 at 07:07 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by big_wasa
^^ That looks smart but you have a max usable weight of 590kg with many cec locosts getting near that. And there still isn't that many cars that
will tow an un-braked 750kg trailer.
As I understand it, any vehicle over 1500Kg (Kerb weight) can tow a750Kg unbraked trailer?
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scimjim
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posted on 10/6/13 at 07:09 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by 40inches
quote: Originally posted by scimjim
quote: Originally posted by 40inches
You could buy a towing A frame and fit it to the front wishbones, or make mounting plates to attach it to. RECOVERY A FRAME TOWING
DOLLY TRAILER TOW BAR 1.8t. | eBay
if the vehicles wheels are on the deck, it needs to be road legal. If it weighs over 750Kg, it needs to have functional brakes (as a trailer, not a
car ) unbraked dollies can only legally be used to recover a broken down vehicle to a place of safety.
Only if it's a Dolly. If it's an "A" frame, the car and "A" frame become a trailer, according to the DOT:
“A”- Frames
When an "A" frame is attached to a vehicle (e.g. a motor car) and towed by a motor vehicle (e.g. motorhome) we believe the "A"
frame and car become a single unit and as such are classified in legislation as a trailer. As a consequence the car and “A”-frame are required to meet
the technical requirements for trailers when used on the road in Great Britain. These requirements are contained within the Road Vehicles
(Construction and Use) Regulations 1986 (SI 1986/1078) as amended (C&U) and the Road Vehicles Lighting Regulations 1989 (SI 1989/1796) as amended
(RVLR).
agreed - so if it's over 750Kg it has to have brakes.
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40inches
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posted on 10/6/13 at 08:40 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by scimjim
quote: Originally posted by 40inches
quote: Originally posted by scimjim
quote: Originally posted by 40inches
You could buy a towing A frame and fit it to the front wishbones, or make mounting plates to attach it to. RECOVERY A FRAME TOWING
DOLLY TRAILER TOW BAR 1.8t. | eBay
if the vehicles wheels are on the deck, it needs to be road legal. If it weighs over 750Kg, it needs to have functional brakes (as a trailer, not a
car ) unbraked dollies can only legally be used to recover a broken down vehicle to a place of safety.
Only if it's a Dolly. If it's an "A" frame, the car and "A" frame become a trailer, according to the DOT:
“A”- Frames
When an "A" frame is attached to a vehicle (e.g. a motor car) and towed by a motor vehicle (e.g. motorhome) we believe the "A"
frame and car become a single unit and as such are classified in legislation as a trailer. As a consequence the car and “A”-frame are required to meet
the technical requirements for trailers when used on the road in Great Britain. These requirements are contained within the Road Vehicles
(Construction and Use) Regulations 1986 (SI 1986/1078) as amended (C&U) and the Road Vehicles Lighting Regulations 1989 (SI 1989/1796) as amended
(RVLR).
agreed - so if it's over 750Kg it has to have brakes.
Agreed my Mk is just over 500kg wet, don't know what it would weigh with a boat anchor though
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fha772
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posted on 11/6/13 at 11:04 AM |
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quote: Originally posted by scimjim
...you can't build a trailer after 29 Oct 2012 without getting it type approved ...
But you can "refurbish" an old trailer, and if you do a good job, it'll look like brand new
http://www.ppcmag.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?f=47&t=6743&start=105
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number-1
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posted on 11/6/13 at 07:00 PM |
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So then....re the original post....has anyone made one or planning to?
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daveb666
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posted on 12/6/13 at 01:00 PM |
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I'd love some more pics from puma931 as to how it's made.
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number-1
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posted on 26/6/13 at 03:09 PM |
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Me too. Looks like a simple yet cheap alternative to trailer hiring
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