panshark
Member
- 544
- 11
- 18
- Location
- Idaho Falls, ID
I've got an idea of something I want to build, and would like to run it past the group first.
A friend has recently shared with me the need to repossess a pickup truck that he was selling to an acquaintance, who has ceased to make payments on the truck. The truck has a blown motor (hence no payments). I've loaded a car onto a flatbed trailer using a crank-operated winch before and it wasn't fun. So instead of using a flatbed trailer to recover the pickup, I was considering possibly constructing a beefed-up car dolly (think single axle U-haul special) to tow behind my duece.
In order to make the dolly as versatile as possible, I would like to build it to max road width which is 8 1/2 feet in my state. On a side note, 6 inches of overhang to the right is acceptable in Idaho. For an extreme circumstance, I could go 14 feet wide, and get a wide load permit.
In order to not tear the heck out of everything in transit, I would want the platform on the tow dolly to articulate.
And this is where it gets wierd: because I don't have a rear-mounted winch, I would be looking to construct an "emergency load" apparatus, Maybe like a 2-pronged grapple hook that I could chain into the holes on my rear duals, and then pull forward 3 feet to speed-winch the towed vehicle into place. Strap down the towed vehicle, then back up to run out the chain of the duals.
Note: I use the term "Fast-Load" because it seems that it would be A LOT faster than cranking on a winch for 45 minutes. Maybe even faster than sweating out a come-along. In order to do this process safely, it would have to be repeated many times, but slowly to assure safe practices are in place and to trouble-shoot any potential mishaps.
This dolly could be used potentially as a safer alternative to flat-towing MV's during recovery.
Any thoughts or suggestions?
A friend has recently shared with me the need to repossess a pickup truck that he was selling to an acquaintance, who has ceased to make payments on the truck. The truck has a blown motor (hence no payments). I've loaded a car onto a flatbed trailer using a crank-operated winch before and it wasn't fun. So instead of using a flatbed trailer to recover the pickup, I was considering possibly constructing a beefed-up car dolly (think single axle U-haul special) to tow behind my duece.
In order to make the dolly as versatile as possible, I would like to build it to max road width which is 8 1/2 feet in my state. On a side note, 6 inches of overhang to the right is acceptable in Idaho. For an extreme circumstance, I could go 14 feet wide, and get a wide load permit.
In order to not tear the heck out of everything in transit, I would want the platform on the tow dolly to articulate.
And this is where it gets wierd: because I don't have a rear-mounted winch, I would be looking to construct an "emergency load" apparatus, Maybe like a 2-pronged grapple hook that I could chain into the holes on my rear duals, and then pull forward 3 feet to speed-winch the towed vehicle into place. Strap down the towed vehicle, then back up to run out the chain of the duals.
Note: I use the term "Fast-Load" because it seems that it would be A LOT faster than cranking on a winch for 45 minutes. Maybe even faster than sweating out a come-along. In order to do this process safely, it would have to be repeated many times, but slowly to assure safe practices are in place and to trouble-shoot any potential mishaps.
This dolly could be used potentially as a safer alternative to flat-towing MV's during recovery.
Any thoughts or suggestions?