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Superhandy trailer dolly

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moab11

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 22, 2015
Messages
573
Location
Thunder Bay, Ontario
Love the price, but seems pretty under powered or the specs are very conservative.
A 2800LB trailer isn't hard to move with a non powered dolly, I'd expect a rating of 5000lb at least.
 

ATC

Well-known member
Joined
May 12, 2012
Messages
8,318
Location
VA
Love the price, but seems pretty under powered or the specs are very conservative.
A 2800LB trailer isn't hard to move with a non powered dolly, I'd expect a rating of 5000lb at least.

I have a 3400# trailer and there is no frickin way anyone is moving it with a manual dolly unless it’s perfectly flat asphalt/concrete.
My 5x8 trailer (2” square tube build) was more than I wanted with the HF trailer mover on my gravel driveway. And I’m a big dude in my early 30’s when I bought it.

I have a skid steer now with a trailer hitch mount. Every trailer is easy now.
 

Old Man Roger

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 6, 2017
Messages
17,691
Location
Palm Coast Florida
Always wanted one but always too cheap to spend the money. The price of some of them are more then what you could buy a tractor for.

I’ve seen some creative alternatives that drive the trailer wheels.
 

moab11

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 22, 2015
Messages
573
Location
Thunder Bay, Ontario
I have a 3400# trailer and there is no frickin way anyone is moving it with a manual dolly unless it’s perfectly flat asphalt/concrete.
My 5x8 trailer (2” square tube build) was more than I wanted with the HF trailer mover on my gravel driveway. And I’m a big dude in my early 30’s when I bought it.

I have a skid steer now with a trailer hitch mount. Every trailer is easy now.
That's all these things are rated for, level driveways. Gravel definitely is a lot harder to move a trailer around.
I move my 3000lb cargo trailer and 4500lb camper trailer with a beefier manual dolly(works way better than the cheap ones), but would love to find a nice powered one to make life easier, especially in the winter when the driveway is slippery.
 

Farmall450

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 23, 2011
Messages
13,371
Location
Marengo, Illinois
It's cool, but unless you're using it for a business or something a lawn mower or ATV will do that all day long. I bought a manual one, and honestly even then it's easier to get the ATV.
 

moab11

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 22, 2015
Messages
573
Location
Thunder Bay, Ontario
My ATV would definitely not like the 500lb tongue weight of my trailer, and my trailer wouldn't like the super low ball height on the atv either. I don't think my push mower would handle it either, and no need for a lawn tractor that also probably wouldn't like it.
There is a use case for these, and yes other things do work better if you have the room or equipment.
 
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Mike007

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 4, 2010
Messages
2,612
I *need one to move my empty car trailer around. I don't want to store a forklift, atv or tractor to do the job. I really don't want to store the dolly. I'm thinking about it....
 

mike93lx

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Dec 9, 2013
Messages
37,702
Location
Richmond, VA
My ATV would definitely not like the 500lb tongue weight of my trailer, and my trailer wouldn't like the super low ball height on the atv either. I don't think my push mower would handle it either, and no need for a lawn tractor that also probably wouldn't like it.
There is a use case for these, and yes other things do work better if you have the room or equipment.
Neither will this. It's rated at 450lb tongue weight

 

Criminal

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2018
Messages
198
Location
Puget Sound
I'd love to have one for my M1101 trailer, but I'd have to fab up a pintle for it. The place I'm parking it is kind-of a pain in the **** to maneuver the trailer into with the jeep or the HMMWV.

Picked this up many years ago on the gov auction for $750, not bad for a $8K aluminum trailer.
 

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IndyGarage

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 29, 2010
Messages
9,712
Location
Indy
I bought the 7000 lb version a few months ago when it was a huge percentage off on Amazon.

Super handy 7500 lb trailer dolly

The difference is the one I have probably has a bigger battery and has the front and rear casters to keep it from flipping over.

I've been moving a 4500 lb boat trailer around with it. I bought it to move trailers around in my storage building but I haven't taken it up there yet. Is it well built? Yes. Is it handy for moving trailers around on flat ground? Yes. Would it move a heavy trailer uphill or downhill. Probably not. The problem is not the power of the unit. The problem is the weight. It doesn't get enough traction to push or pull really hard. The wheels will spin. I have about a 1 1/4 inch step into my shop, and it will not push the 4500 lb trailer up that step. Even at full speed, it just stops dead and spins the wheels. Would I pay $699 for the smaller one - yeah maybe. Would I pay $2200 for the larger one - no way.
 

moab11

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 22, 2015
Messages
573
Location
Thunder Bay, Ontario
I went the opposite way and bought the Trax GT8000, the thing is a beast and is very quick when on the high speed setting, low speed is perfect for fine maneuvering.

What ended up selling me was it's a Canadian company, and it all made in house. 36v motor, not a winch with a gear welded to the drum, throttle for variable speed and a locking differential for easier turning. Definitely quite a bit more money, but this should last me a very long time and looks like any service should be easy down the road.
 
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