That depends if all the wheels are on the ground. Some cars have to have the drive shaft disconnected so it can be towed. Then it doesn't click up mileage.
depends on how high the hitch is and how high the vehicle being towed is
if the towed vehicle is not taken back by the owner then the vehicle is actioned.
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.
Depends on the car, and where the odometer is hooked up. Some will, some won't. Not many cars are towed long enough for towed distance to mean anything.
No. Payload is what you can carry in the actual vehicle while towing is what can be towed behind it.
the average is 6 feet
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.
A vehicle hitch is a mount on the rear of a vehicle where a trailer can be connected. When a trailer is hooked to a vehicle to be towed it is said to be "hitched" to the towing vehicle.
You can have it towed at the owner's expense (meaning you can call a towing company and it will come and tow the vehicle. The owner, if he wants the vehicle, then needs to go to the towing company and reclaim the vehicle by paying the towing and storage fees).
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.