According to Kia's website, "The only way to tow it behind a motor home or RV would be to tow it with all four wheels off the ground. Ask your local Kia dealer for details."
This MAY only apply to the AWD version, but just to be safe I'd ask your Kia dealer to be sure you're not voiding your warranty.
Absolutely. You will have to dolly the drive wheels.
A tow dolly is used to tow a front-wheel drive car behind a large vehicle, such as an RV. It basically consists of an axle and a tow-hitch on top of two wheels.
never seen it A car dolly is recommended for front-wheel drive vehicles; it lifts the front wheels of your vehicle off the pavement and pulls it behind a truck...
I was told by a Toyota dealer that I cannot dolly tow a car (AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION) with the drive wheels on the ground. So, a front wheel drive car can be on the dolly forward but a rear wheel drive would have to be backed on the dolly.
if you have removed rear drive shaft and the front wheels will be on tow dolly then there is no sense in it.
Yes, as long as the drive wheels are up on the dolly.
Any car with a standard transmission as long as it is in neutral. Automatic transmissions will overheat and burn up if the engine is not running. Front wheel drive cars can be towed using a tow dolly that puts the front wheels in a two wheel trailer called a tow dolly and the car rides on the dolly and the back wheels.
It is not advisable to tow a full size pickup (or any other rear wheel drive vehicle) behind a motorhome, unless all 4 wheels are on a dolly. This can be acomplished though by a drive-shaft disconnect. These are quite expensive.
All Celebrities are Front Wheel Drive. So, if you use a tow dolly the front wheels will be off the ground and only the rear wheels will be in motion. This is just fine, you can spin those back wheels all you like.
Front wheels on the ground, rear wheels on a dolly or Modify the vehicle to have a electrical lube pump installed
You put the automatic in neutral, or put a dolly under the drive wheels.
yes, it will burn tranny up. if its not all wheel drive why can't you tow it from the rear