From my understanding, the turnpike restrictions apply only to commercial vehicles, which an RV is not.
No. You have no way of controlling the vehicle if it comes loose.
Yes, but vehicle being towed must be insured as well as the dolly
No way to answer without knowing who has custody of it, and why the vehicle was towed in the first place.
depends on how high the hitch is and how high the vehicle being towed is
Yes! Any vehicle has the capability of being towed. If the vehicle has 4 rolling wheels and is in neutral, it can be towed.
other than being sufficiently strong for the task, nothing that i know of. i would worry more about not running the towed vehicle into the towing vehicle and that the towed vehicle has brake lights though.
Whatever you agree too, there is no legal limit or minimum amount charged unless you have the car impounded by the police or towed to police facilities, NOTE if your vehicle was towed due to parking violations or left on the side of the road, you have technically abandoned the vehicle, so if it was towed from a private lot look at the parking signs about towing, by knowingly leaving your vehicle there you automatically agreed to whatever the property owners fees were at the time.
The Brake Buddy is used to brake a trailer that is being towed behind another vehicle. The Brake buddy site reports that their product reduces stopping distances, prevents wear on motorhomes brakes, and easily installs in minutes.
This is the maximum amount of weight a vehicle can tow, if what being towed has brakes. A towed vehicle with brakes (electronic brakes) responds to the same braking that the vehicle doing the towing has. If the vehicle being towed does not have brakes, the maximum towing capacity is much less.
it really dosent matter how u do it.
if the towed vehicle is not taken back by the owner then the vehicle is actioned.
Never. Vehicle must be properly maintained at all times. If lights don't work, have it towed or fix it before driving.