sparky1981
Well-Known Member
This thread is freaking me out.We have recently bought a ivor 510 trailer and am abit worried about travelling it now!!
Dont forget the anti snaking device, worth its weight in gold,and go to your local auto electrical shop. ( a specialist,not your local auto factors or...cringe.. Halfords) and get a really good set of rear lights ,and wire in a fog lamp. Rear fog lamps are compulsory but how many trailers have them? It doesnt get picked up because trailers arent MOT,d. Side marker lights are another good thing,not just reflectors.
This thread is freaking me out.We have recently bought a ivor 510 trailer and am abit worried about travelling it now!!
We pull my 16.2hh with a nissan navara pick up. is this ok?
We pull my 16.2hh with a nissan navara pick up. is this ok?
You need to be a confident driver and be aware of what is going on around you. Single carrigeways I think are more dangerous as people always want to get past you.
Im a little bit amused well possibly shocked by some people I know they say oh we carnt afford a lorry, they then go out and buy a £30k+ 4x4 that costs a fortune to run, service and tax. and loses about half its value in 2 years then they go out and trade it in for another!!!! sorry it looks more like keeping up with the joneses than anything else ...
oooh this is a horrid threadi have an equitrek and i had a snapped axle like lucemoose- i was on an A road and managed to pull into one of those lay by thngs- a lovely friend came to pick up horse and then mr recovery man came to pick trailer up!
i think that taking your horse travelling anywhere is laden with risk- so to say that you won't let them go in a trailer but will in a lorry is a bit strange to me- a lorry could just as easily have an accident if being driven sensibly. my friend had a lovely wagon- very new, very well maintained (her dad ran a haulage firm so they knew what they were doing) and one day she was driving down the M6, heard a wierd noise, pulled over on the hard shoulder and noticed lorry was on fire! they had to pull the horses off the lorry (whilst the traffic was still moving) and wait for the police/ firemen to come. fortunately the horses were very well behaved. the whole lorry was a complete shell in the end and the tyres all exploded as well- so i would much rather stick with my car and trailer thanks very much! i have trailer regularly serviced and drive sensibly and just hope that i'll be ok!
I. Can't. Afford. A. Lorry.
My company car is a 4x4. I'm lucky I suppose in that respect, but I do need 4WD on occasions for my job. It only (!) cost £18,000 new, nothing like £30k and works its behind off doing 40,000 miles/year.
If I had to tax/plate/insure/maintain/fuel a lorry I would have to go out of competing. End Of.
Oh and Lucemoose - did that recovery truck put your trailer on their lorry with the horse still inside?? If so then that's shocking, they are NOT supposed to do that at all!
I have towed 1000's and 1000's of miles up and down motorways and never had an issue.
imo accidents are caused by bad driving by the person towing or if someone crashes into you, it is likely they would crash into you regardless of what you are driving.
make sure you have a big enough and heavy enough 4x4 so you don't get sucked in by HGVs passing- we've never experienced that on the motorway but have a huge 4x4.
AJN 1960 ,you make many good points. I am more than a bit suspicious of equitreck like trailers . The horse area is extended by raising it and going out over the wheels. Old fashioned heavy rice trailers kept the C of G low by positioning the horses betwean the wheels. I also find it very disturbing that i axle failures on these equitrecks seem to be cropping up.
yes maybe but as Mike points out it isnt such a good idea to have such a high center of gravity esp carrying a load that will shift, something like a old rice will be more stable as the wheel track is wider and lower than the body of the trailer...i think that its a well known problem on certain models that they have now sorted out. i've not had any probs with mine since the axles were replaced. still crap customer service tho![]()
If it was something like a car or van hitting the back of a 7.5 ton it wouldmost likely hit the lorry chassis or ride under untill they hit the back axle, might not be so good if it was another lorry but your horses would stand a better chance than other types of horse transport ...I always wonder what would happen to a horse in the end partition if someone drove up the back of my lorry. I think everything is as unsafe as each other. Its not you or your lorry, trailer that you have to worry about - its everyone else on the road.
I've towed an Ifor 505 up and down the M6 (from the Midlands to Scotland) for about 10 years now with no problem. All about making sure the trailer is up to the job, decent towing vehicle (I had a Mitsubishi Shogun and now an Isuzu Trooper), and BEING AWARE OF TRAFFIC AROUND. Had more near misses without a trailer behind - some people just shouldn't be driving on any road, let alone a motorway. I don't have a new towing vehicles, as I can't afford one (as much as I would like to), even if I won the lottery and could afford a lorry I would still have my 4x4 and a trailer!