You may not tow anything with a category B1 licence.
yes it is
sureI've spoken to the DVLA and as long as you have category B1 on your licence you can. It must however be under 550 kg.
You can operate a quad bike with a category B or B1 licence.
a motorcycle license Wrong. First there is no such thing as a motorcycle licence. Never has been. Look on the front of a driving licence. None have ever said they are Full motorcycle driving licence. The only words are 'UK Driving Licence'. What matters are the category's inside the driving licence that are valid to drive. Up until 2001, upon passing the motorcycle category test, riders were also given free, the B1 category This is the category for 3 wheeled vehicles under 450kg and small 4 wheeled cars weighing under 550kg. It is also the category for Heavy Quads weighing under 400kg. It is the B1 category which allows a Reliant Robin to be driven. After 2001, new European regulations came into force. The B1 category became a category in its own right, no longer given free when passing a motorcycle test. At the time of writing, there is NO test available to receive this category. The B1 category is due to vanish in the next few years when driving category's are once again updated. Anyone now taking a driving test in a Reliant Robin will receive a car category on their licence.
it's three or four-wheeled light vehicles, means any motor tricycles, quadricycles and three or four-wheeled vehicles with an unladen weight of no more than 550kg.
Contact your nearest DVLA they should help you out.
To drive a ltz400 quad bike you will need a full car licence or full motorcycle licence category B1. Also you will have to be at least 17 years old to get the licence.
No, you need an automobile license.
Yes you can. As of January 2013 a B1 licence allows you to drive a light car/ quadricycle up to 550kg with no restriction on power.
No, you can't. Before about 2001, passing your motorcycle tests in full would get you a B1 category permit thrown in on your licence. And since the Robin was included under category B1, this meant, in effect, that you could drive a Robin on what people tend to think of as a 'bike licence'. As it stands now, though, although a Robin still falls into category B1, you don't get that category for passing bike tests any more. Which means that in order to drive a Reliant Robin in the UK now, you must pass a full car driving test.
the answer is....