Your best bet is to use a car dolly (making sure the front wheels are on the dolly and the rear on the road) or a car trailer. Auto trannies parts move when the vehicles are towed, but the fluid is not pumped trhought the system and as a result it overheats and u end up with a shot tranny. Hope this helps... By he way the vehicle owners manual normally has a section on this subject.
A 2004 Dodge Neon sits up pretty high. A flat tow or a dolly tow would have little impact on the vehicle. Both are acceptable means of towing this vehicle.
tow from the front with the transmission in neutral.
NoNo
Remove the driveshafts.
You should never tow a car with Automatic transmission
Yes. Safest way would be to use a flatbed style tow truck
Yes - transmission and transfer case both in neutral.
how do i tow my deawoo
For 2wd's :With automatic transmission, you must dolly the rear wheels and tow it backwards, or remove the driveshaft to tow it frontwards. With manual transmission, you can get away with leaving the transmission in neutral, but if you tow serious distances, like cross-country or something, the ideal method would be to remove the driveshaft, to be safest.For 4X4's :With automatic transmission, you must dolly all wheels, or remove the driveshaft(s) to whichever (or both) axle with wheels that will be on the ground.With manual transmission, you can get away with leaving both the transmission and transfer case in neutral, but if you tow serious distances, like cross-country or something, the ideal method would be to remove the driveshafts to any axle with wheels that will be on the ground, to be safest.
no
If it is a standard shift and not an automatic, yes as long as you put it in neutral. If it is an automatic you can disconnect the drive shaft. Otherwise you cannot tow it or you will damage the transmission as it will overheat.
No you never want to over fill the transmission. Towing something safely does not depend on and amount of fluid in the transmission but by the weight of what you are trying to tow and by what your automobile was designed for. Hope this helps.