All that said, the test itself is easy. I have not long done it and all in, including the test fee and a tutor for a 3 hour lesson was about £400.00.

as long as you can reverse a trailer the test itself posed no issues and I could have passed with less tuition, but my employer paid for it so not a problem for me.
 
Twill all be changing over here soon. You will has to pass a trailer test and towing a twin axle trailers with a car will be illegale . not sure about little halfrauds trailers though.
 
Hi guys,

just want to ask a few questions on this, as when I was building my trailer I used the dvla site and called various official trailer manufacturer's to verify but no one would give me a straight answer,

I have a post 97 license btw,


ok so my understanding is above 750 kg it has to be braked,

however this rides along with the MAM of the towing vehicle which is now a 110 3door,

so lets say my landy weighs 2 tons and can tow 3 tons (cant remember the actual figure)

and I have a ifor williams twin axle which can carry 3tons
but Only weighs 1 ton


so my maximum train weight is 5 tons (over the limit)

so in order to be within the law id need to have my trailer re plated to drop the carrying weight to 1.5 tons their for limiting the use of my trailer if say my dad wanted to use it for his vintage tractor,


can someone verify this as it seems a little silly to limit us on maximum possible weight rather than the actual carrying weight, im currently renovating my house and want to buy all the insulation in bulk as its cheaper but risk getting pulled and fined ect as the MAM is over 3.5ton even although I'm only carrying a few hundred KG of insulation board and the trailer is well within the towable limit for the landy and the whole lot is under 3.5ton (actual weight),

jeeze this is such a mindfuc£!
 
Looks like most of them are 3050kgs, so you have 450 left up 3500, so you are stuck with a max of 750kgs trailer
 
yes this is my point, if I had a trailer of 750kgs id still have a combined MAM of over 3500kgs

my trailer would have to be plated 450kgs MAM

jus because the MAM of the landy is 3050 tons and the trailer MAM is 3 tons doesn't mean both are at full capacity,

if im in my landy, towing 100kg of "feathers" but my trailer has a MAM of 3 tons, im breaking the law,

which would mean id have to either have a tiny trailer or restrict the usage of mine by plating it lower and then have to buy my old man a new trailer that he can use with his paper license...
 
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yes this is my point, if I had a trailer of 750kgs id still have a combined MAM of over 3500kgs

my trailer would have to be plated 450kgs MAM

jus because the MAM of the landy is 3050 tons and the trailer MAM is 3 tons doesn't mean both are at full capacity,

if im in my landy, towing 100kg of "feathers" but my trailer has a MAM of 3 tons, im breaking the law,

which would mean id have to either have a tiny trailer or restrict the usage of mine by plating it lower and then have to buy my old man a new trailer that he can use with his paper license...

Doesn't even have to have feathers in. Simply hooking it up empty at the side of the road is illegal.

Welcome to the wonderful VOSA world of what might possibly happen :rolleyes:
 
Yes thats what I was meaning, sorry if the way I was putting it was confusing people, basically I can only tow the remainder of the MAM left over from the(heavier) towing motor and the trailer plate must state this.
Better buy a few plates I guess!

Oh and its better to be braked but at these "legal weight's" is pretty pointless as it will always be under 750kg
 
What a crock or absolute ****e!
The heavier the tow car the better! No wonder we see people on the motorway with 5 people in the focus, tow bar on the floor and a 1/2 mile long caravan behind! Then they wonder why they end up down the embankment!
 
They changed the law so you can only tow 750kg if test passed post 97

But last year the uk was forced to come back in to line with Europe on this wich means anyone with a car licence can tow a combined mam weight of 3500kg :D
 
Why not take the extra test? I gather it's not that difficult, and then you would solve all these problems. of course there's a fee, and the cost of the lessons - you have to take the test in a school vehicle, as the trailer has to be certified as to weight loading etc.

As a secondary thought, can you put L plates on and tow the higher weights if accompanied by somebody with the "full" license?
 
taking the test is the obvious option but its the cost that some of us simply cant afford, I know a few guys that have been put through the test here in Aberdeen that have been failed for ridiculous reasons,

even more so when you discover the trailer they were going to be towing was under the 750kg and braked but the company thought it would take the precaution anyway, these are guys I work with and trust, that I know can reverse a trailer ect. as the company was paying they never really bothered about it, but after failing and having to pay to re-sit the test 3 times when it wasn't needed anyway is a bit of a rip off,

it's all just another one of VOSA's money making scams,

bet they cant wait to get rid of the tax disc, think of the income in fines when the police computer is slow to update!


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not sure about the L plates I guess that wouldn't be allowed,
 
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yes this is my point, if I had a trailer of 750kgs id still have a combined MAM of over 3500kgs

my trailer would have to be plated 450kgs MAM

no, your trailer would have to be plated at 750kg, (or be unplated with tyres limiting 750max) you can tow 750kg even if you have 3500mam vehicle see the ifor williams flow chart
 
Why not take the extra test? I gather it's not that difficult, and then you would solve all these problems. of course there's a fee, and the cost of the lessons - you have to take the test in a school vehicle, as the trailer has to be certified as to weight loading etc.

As a secondary thought, can you put L plates on and tow the higher weights if accompanied by somebody with the "full" license?



yes you can ;) and no you dont have to take the test in a school vehicle at all as long as your towing vehicle and trailer meet the requirements for the test thats all that matters.

i recently taught a mate of mine to tow an ADI who didnt have towing on his license as he wanted to expand his business by offering the towing license option. its now a big part of his business.
 
no, your trailer would have to be plated at 750kg, (or be unplated with tyres limiting 750max) you can tow 750kg even if you have 3500mam vehicle see the ifor williams flow chart

if this is the case why is the total train weight (MAM) limited to 3500kgs

with out the extra test you cant have a total MAM of over 3500kgs,

also I cant find the flow chart anywhere on the IFW site,

as Wilson294 said:
"But last year the uk was forced to come back in to line with Europe on this wich means anyone with a car licence can tow a combined mam weight of 3500kg"


if what you saying is correct then it would kind of tie in my original gripe, which was having to limit the use of my trailer because it can carry (and is plated stating so) approx. 3000kgs ,but im only allowed to carry a max of 750kgs,

not trying to be awkward but this is what im trying to clear up and I cant find a straight answer from anyone.
 
also I cant find the flow chart anywhere on the IFW site,

tow.jpg
 

right, ok

first ones yes as a 110 is 3050kgs

2nd is no as the IFW is rated to 3000kgs= total MAM 6050kgs

3rd is no too as stated above trailer MAM is 3000kgs

=not permitted to tow

not sure where their getting the 4250kg value from either, I presume that's for tractors pulling sheep crates ect, never seen a 3.5ton car before, maybe a 101 right enough..
 
right, ok

first ones yes as a 110 is 3050kgs

2nd is no as the IFW is rated to 3000kgs= total MAM 6050kgs

3rd is no too as stated above trailer MAM is 3000kgs

=not permitted to tow

not sure where their getting the 4250kg value from either, I presume that's for tractors pulling sheep crates ect, never seen a 3.5ton car before, maybe a 101 right enough..

Well done that man. They get the 3.5ton vehicle from vans and the like small trucks ie towing plant equipment how many road workers have you seen towing a diggeror roller behind them.
 
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