iceman01
Junior Member
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2022
- Posts
- 2
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- mulkeytown Illinois
- First Name
- jay
- Truck Year
- 1976
- Truck Model
- k10
- Engine Size
- 383
Moving about 900 miles away what’s best way to tow my 76 k10
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I think it depends on how far you have to go. At one time I had logged thousands of uneventful miles with a minivan on tow dolly behind our motorhome. I once towed my Dodge P/U on a tow dolly about 200 miles, on the freeway, behind the same motorhome. The tow dolly was under braked for the heavy pickup and it wanted to sway at 65. The RV's rear end was to heavy for it to actually sway but I could feel it push it right and left, so I pretty much stuck to 55MPH. For that reason I'd rather have a large heavy truck on a trailer, but if I owned the dolly (still have it actually) yes I would dolly it, with the front on the dolly, I'd just use a lot of extra caution. If your not getting on the freeway that would be better, but. IDK do you have much experience with a dolly? I'd feel better about it if you do.What do you guys think of using a car dolly and disconnecting the rear driveshaft to tow it by only using the front wheels on the dolly? I think I have to do this to get my 86 3+3 4X4 Dually home next weekend. I hope the dolly is wide enough to put a Dually front end on. My car trailer won’t be big enough for the 3+3 Dually. I have hauled a 3+3 SRW but not a Dually. What say you guys?
Ya, and he has a two lane mountain pass to pull. Should be a good test route.I'm supposed to pickup a uhaul trailer this weekend to drag my rig to SirRobyn0 Monday. Full car trailer though not the dolly. My rig is an 84 short wide pulled by an 02 silverado 4.8 4x4, I'll let you know how it goes.
You could take the outside dual off to fit it on the trailer in the rear I believe. I thought the track width was the same or similar for single vs dually, it's jut the hub that sticks out on the dually?What do you guys think of using a car dolly and disconnecting the rear driveshaft to tow it by only using the front wheels on the dolly? I think I have to do this to get my 86 3+3 4X4 Dually home next weekend. I hope the dolly is wide enough to put a Dually front end on. My car trailer won’t be big enough for the 3+3 Dually. I have hauled a 3+3 SRW but not a Dually. What say you guys?
@BearKing I did not specifically say this, but I would not even consider this unless the dolly has working brakes. And even if it does you'll likely find that it's not as much brake as you'd like given the weight of the truck.If you have an NP203, the GM instructions for my truck show you can just put the transfer case in neutral and tow it with 4 wheels down. However, I tried it once with my Ford Expedition and it really made me uncomfortable. Towing nearly 5000 lbs with no brakes on the towed vehicle seems like a bad idea if I had to do any quick braking.
I also checked into using a trailer from Uhaul, but that quickly got complicated. They don’t have the squarebody truck length and weight in their database, so it’s up to the local guy to determine if it fits on the trailer. Also, the combination of truck and trailer puts it over the typical 5000 weight for a class 3 hitch.
Did not know, that was a problem.Not all states are ok with tow dollies, ran into an issue in either NY or NJ or both many years ago.
I've done some chit with U-haul trailers I wasn't suppose to either but do keep in mind, if they find out you'll get in trouble. Even something as simple as a flat on the trailer, the company could fine you and ban you from future rentals. My biggest U-haul sins have been renting trailers with one vehicle and towing it with another, which could also get a guy in trouble, so I get it. Just understand it's not risk free.Having personally moved 4 different squares on both methods, trailer wins hands down. You can dolly it for shorter trips usually without complications but the trailer makes it an easier time overall. With trailering, the drivelines can stay attached so less monkey business.
With U-Haul, get the biggest trailer and tell them it's for a mustang or something. Some associates will get squirelly since your K10 won't It be on the approved list. It will be tight with the lwb truck, but doable. Use proper judgment and you're good to go. Roll safe.