We should start a thread with all the bad or mismatched outfits! I regularly see mondeos and vectras on their knees towing a twin axle badly loaded! Pics too if you can!
We must use different caravan sites and roads. I rarely see caravans that are anything but reasonably level, occasionally I see outfits where I wonder about the suitability.
------------- Bill
For a licence dated 1997 or later you must add together the plated max weight of the caravan and trailer, if the total is 3500 or less you can tow it. You may even tow a caravan with a MAM greater than the cars unladen mass the restriction was removed in 2013
see it every bank holiday , personally I wish there were more road side and weighbridge checks this would weed out the illegal and badly loaded outfits
More likely because they are completely confused about the varied advice both formal and informal from various sources that don't even seem to be able to get their terminology aligned?
you wouldn't see anyone either as there is little point doing it esp if you are on grass, it will give a false reading due to it sinking into the ground, the majority of people would do this at home/storage, and then once right just make sure that everything goes back in the caravan in the same place when packing up
It's not just the noseweight, people then fill their cars with people, dogs, awnings, luggage, boxes and boxes on the roof, and probably kitchen sinks. Very few people seem to consider rear axle loadings on the car.
My point was people who clearly need to weigh it don't on site. Not all gauges use the floor anyway, mine doesn't. Lots leaving today and you can see the back of the car drop to the floor when they hook up.
It's not rocket science, if you can't lift it most cars won't take it.
Best one seen today is a Hobby twin axle just hitched onto a Vectra hatchback.
I know when I've asked my friends who caravan none of them do or have ever checked their nose weight. For a laugh last time I did my mates for him despite his dismissive attitude towards it. He weighed in at 140kg on a van with mtplm of 1350.
Quote: Originally posted by Greendemon315 on 06/4/2015
It's not just the noseweight, people then fill their cars with people, dogs, awnings, luggage, boxes and boxes on the roof, and probably kitchen sinks. Very few people seem to consider rear axle loadings on the car.
The situation isn't helped when no less an organisation than the Caravan Club regularly carry adverts for cars in their magazine, the advert highlighting the car's maximum towing limit.