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[Healeys] Towing advice

Subject: [Healeys] Towing advice
From: pryner at verizon.net (Peter Ryner)
Date: Sat, 09 Jul 2011 10:25:56 -0400
References: <652DC005-A126-4C95-8B2C-CB1CEEF2F924@mac.com> <CAPTa0B7Y++cErVr208MnuMgMdxhKR3-eWB1KRDcyWXF0Rhth=g@mail.gmail.com> <CAO8P17Yv+ceab7Be18PC15JwXac_hThLx4EEhKkntexBhq4+iw@mail.gmail.com> <CAPTa0B43nFowWqyf71RNeL35kyTe3ZadY7Wwav7FVEYw+GhaQg@mail.gmail.com> <023001cc3e36$e6182580$b2487080$@qwest.net>
My thoughts exactly.  How can the shocks heat up if they are not moving?

I've towed LBCs all over the country and found that if I just hold the car 
down by the axles the body tends to bounce and the car will move on the 
trailer.  On a long trip like over 1000 miles, the movement can be 
significant.  That said, my old cars didn't have tie down hooks so I 
couldn't tie them down by the body.  The best solution I came up with was to 
tie the  axles down using four straps in an X.  If I had a very long 
distance to travel and had other items on the trailer such as spare engines, 
transmissions and the like where the car had little room to move around, I 
blocked the wheels on the sides with  2X4 pieces so the car wouldn't bounce 
sideways.  It never moved forward and backwards.  Works like a champ as long 
as you have a wood bed to attach the 2X4s.
Just my experience.
Pete
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Herbert Miller" <hgmiller3 at qwest.net>
To: "'Michael Oritt'" <michael.oritt at gmail.com>; "'F Ronald Rader'" 
<f.ronald.rader at gmail.com>
Cc: "'List Healey'" <healeys at autox.team.net>
Sent: Saturday, July 09, 2011 8:51 AM
Subject: Re: [Healeys] Towing advice


> Actually the opposite is true.
>
> Herb Miller
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: healeys-bounces at autox.team.net 
> [mailto:healeys-bounces at autox.team.net]
> On Behalf Of Michael Oritt
> Sent: Saturday, July 09, 2011 5:00 AM
> To: F Ronald Rader
> Cc: List Healey
> Subject: Re: [Healeys] Towing advice
>
> Ron--
>
> Securing a car by the chassis, as opposed to by the wheels, A-arms or 
> axles
> places the suspension under a constant load for the entire length of the
> trip and can overheat the fluid in the shocks.
>
> Best--Michael Oritt

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