A-Frame Towing
Author
Discussion

agentsmith

Original Poster:

412 posts

214 months

Friday 28th October 2011
quotequote all
hi all,

anyone know if you need seperate road insurance, MOT, and TAX to tow say a light Track Car using an A-Frame? (or is this a really bad idea? smile )

thanks a lot.

gog440

9,294 posts

211 months

Friday 28th October 2011
quotequote all
agentsmith said:
hi all,

anyone know if you need seperate road insurance, MOT, and TAX to tow say a light Track Car using an A-Frame? (or is this a really bad idea? smile )

thanks a lot.
I am sure a member of the plod will give you a definitive answer but in my experience they police dont like them very much and if you are towing regularly or a long way a trailer would be better (and a damn sight easier to tow)

The Moose

23,523 posts

230 months

Friday 28th October 2011
quotequote all
gog440 said:
I am sure a member of the plod will give you a definitive answer but in my experience they police dont like them very much and if you are towing regularly or a long way a trailer would be better (and a damn sight easier to tow)
Out of interest, why would it be easier to tow?

MJK 24

5,670 posts

257 months

Friday 28th October 2011
quotequote all
Needs to be taxed, insured and if applicable, MOT'd if any part of the vehicle being towed is touching the floor.

andy-xr

13,204 posts

225 months

Friday 28th October 2011
quotequote all
MJK 24 said:
Needs to be taxed, insured and if applicable, MOT'd if any part of the vehicle being towed is touching the floor.
You sure? (I'm not btw)

I thought it was more like if the car wasn't able to make decisions on direction/speed then it was fine without tax/MOT/insurance etc

littleredrooster

6,100 posts

217 months

Friday 28th October 2011
quotequote all
Unless you link into the towed car's brakes, it will become an unbraked trailer which has its own set of regs (and a world of pain). Even the recovery services don't use them much these days.

Edited by littleredrooster on Friday 28th October 23:16

Jem0911

4,415 posts

222 months

Friday 28th October 2011
quotequote all
As above.
Over 750KG total must be braked.
Not sure on MOT and rent.

Glade

4,478 posts

244 months

Friday 28th October 2011
quotequote all
I thought that they are only allowed to tow the car to a place of safety in an emergency. but i can't find a link to back that up now

General rules for towing...
http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/Motoring/DriverLicensi...

And something specifically about a-frames & dollies.

direct.gov.uk said:
Towing a car using an A-frame or dolly
If you attach an A-frame to a car in order to tow it with a larger vehicle, the car plus A-frame counts as a trailer.
If you use a dolly to tow a broken-down vehicle, the dolly counts as a trailer.
In both cases the usual safety regulations for trailers apply.
found here http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/Motoring/DriverLicensi...


Glade

4,478 posts

244 months

Friday 28th October 2011
quotequote all
Ahh... pistonheads FAQ.

http://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&a...

Dollies are only for emergency recovery, a-frames mean that the car effectively becomes a trailer and the trailer rules apply.

agentsmith

Original Poster:

412 posts

214 months

Sunday 30th October 2011
quotequote all
thanks for the wealth of knowledge folks! much appreciated.