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Car Forum / UK Car Forums / General Car Topics (UK group) / February 2007

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Anyone got a car transporter trailer?

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Jack - 08 Feb 2007 19:52 GMT
Been offered a car transporter trailer for a price almost too good to
refuse, planning on doing a few track days or hillclimbs so it should come
in useful.
Obviously if I'm only using it for this it's going to be doing nothing 99%
of the time and was curious what others do with their trailer for the
remaining time, does it just sit doing nothing or are there any worthwhile
ways to make money from it, such as hiring it out?
Bob Sherunckle - 08 Feb 2007 19:58 GMT
> Been offered a car transporter trailer for a price almost too good to
> refuse, planning on doing a few track days or hillclimbs so it should come
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> remaining time, does it just sit doing nothing or are there any worthwhile
> ways to make money from it, such as hiring it out?

My trailer fits my car.
Virtually nothing normal size would fit on there  - apart from some
something mini or Caterham sized. Anyone I know with a car that size already
has their own trailer - most if not all better than mine.

Apart from that, who would you trust with your trailer, unless you knew them
very very well indeed ?
Rob - 08 Feb 2007 23:37 GMT
you can hire it out at silly bugger amounts 50 quid a pop isnt uncommon, or
you could do scrap like me :)
Jack - 09 Feb 2007 00:19 GMT
> you can hire it out at silly bugger amounts 50 quid a pop isnt uncommon,
> or you could do scrap like me :)

As Bob says I'm not sure hiring it out would be the best idea.
When you say scrap, do you mean start a scrap yard? Don't have room for
that.
Elder - 09 Feb 2007 09:06 GMT
>> you can hire it out at silly bugger amounts 50 quid a pop isnt uncommon,
>> or you could do scrap like me :)
>
>As Bob says I'm not sure hiring it out would be the best idea.
>When you say scrap, do you mean start a scrap yard? Don't have room for
>that.

Nah, I think he means offer to buy scrapper for cash, or even charge to
pick them up. Then weigh them in for more cash at the local scrappy..
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Geoff - 09 Feb 2007 09:27 GMT
> Been offered a car transporter trailer for a price almost too good to
> refuse, planning on doing a few track days or hillclimbs so it should come
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> remaining time, does it just sit doing nothing or are there any worthwhile
> ways to make money from it, such as hiring it out?

You can hire it out, expect to pay a lot of insurance, expect people
to miss-treat  it and expect to get a phone call to say it's upside down
in the ditch at the side of the M4.

You can move cars for people, again expect to pay a lot in insurance if
you want to do it properly, and then you may need to purchased a
suitable tow vehicle.

Mine stays securely locked onto the drive, no one will ever borrow it,
mate of mine lent his trailer and Discovery, trailer got a tank slapper
on a down hill section of the A303, he lost the lot, 3rd part only
insurance.

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Cheers, Geoff.
www.anoraks.uk.net

Bob Sherunckle - 09 Feb 2007 19:33 GMT
>> Been offered a car transporter trailer for a price almost too good to
>> refuse, planning on doing a few track days or hillclimbs so it should
[quoted text clipped - 19 lines]
> on a down hill section of the A303, he lost the lot, 3rd part only
> insurance.

Bingo. A car on a trailer is a heavy load indeed and it really needs to be
loaded correctly with the weight distribution spot on. The tow car needs to
be stable as well. Add an inexperienced driver to this and a tank slapper
can end in disaster.

Having experienced trailer snake when I loaded the car onto it wrongly, I
can testify that there is no finer laxative.
 
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