it really dosent matter how u do it.
depends on how high the hitch is and how high the vehicle being towed is
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.
Yes! Any vehicle has the capability of being towed. If the vehicle has 4 rolling wheels and is in neutral, it can be towed.
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.
the average is 6 feet
the average is 6 feet.
yes you canyes you canyes you can
the average is 6 feet
No. You have no way of controlling the vehicle if it comes loose.
The vehicle being towed has to have physical damage coverage itself in order to be covered for damage. A vehicle towing another vehicle does transfer the liability insurance to the trailer or object it is legally towing but the physical damage done to the object being towed does not transfer.
You can tell if a car is reposed by seeing if it is just sitting there. Reposed just means: The act of resting or the state of being at rest.
No way to answer without knowing who has custody of it, and why the vehicle was towed in the first place.