Jockey wheel caravan mover
Comments
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We had a Purpleline one once. It was ok for short moves on solid fairly level surfaces but not very good on gravel. Would I recommend one? No, I don't think I would though others may disagree. Besides, this was years ago and things may have improved.
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With a load of 100kg (say) at the jockey wheel, I fail to see how any device like this can move a heavy van on anything other than a smooth level surface. The idea of pulling the road wheels over even a tiny kerb is, I think, laughable.
If I'm wrong, can someone point me to some You Tube evidence please ;-)
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I had a Mr Shifta, this is not a jockey wheel type but couples via the hitch; a two wheeled tractor with a towball on top.
In the right application it was excellent, in the wrong it was a waste of space.
By right, the van needs to be quite light, the terrain firm, the incline modest and things like dry or wet play a role.
To better explain it was great with my 1100 kg single axle van on the hard paving, concrete and tarmac surfaces with 1:14 inclines. However with a change of van to a 1750 kg it was inadequate if things were wet, primarily in stopping the van as opposed to hauling it. A moving van could push the mover on. In dry conditions it just coped but clearly it was close to marginal. It would certainly not haul up our kerbs but then neither could its replacement a Powrtouch HD mover.
The Mr Shifta is a different tool to the others in it carries a big battery increasing its mass and so its traction frictional "grip". A very good tool for the right job.
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We sold ours after a couple of trials,
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I've got one of these: http://www.campertrolley.co.uk/ which does the job I need it to pretty well.
The job being to turn the van around once I've pulled it up the drive and stick it into a tight space alongside the garage, and then to get it out when needed. I don't take it with me, it's purely for use at home on an uneven and slightly sloping driveway.
It's easy and accurate to use, you just need to remember to charge it every time.0 -
Think about the fact that jockey-wheel movers only have 50-80kg of downforce to allow them to grip. A normal mover will have ~750kg
per wheel.So if you're anywhere that requires more than just a light pull (eg any slope, or soft underfoot) the jocket wheel mover will not cope as well as the normal type and may well not cope at all !
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