Trying to cut down my vehicle usage, however my 75lbs dog comes to work with me every day. I live in an area that is too hot for her to walk with her feet unprotected a significant portion of the year.

I was hoping to convert my niece’s old bike trailer into a dog trailer to pull behind. But so far the only two I have found were $1300 and $1500 and it looks like one of them is no longer available.

  • Pulling weight is different than standing weight. If you’re 300lbs and just don’t want to admit it, that’s fine. But it you really are pulling your dog in a trailer hitched to the scooter… well, a couple things come to mind.

    First, you can probably tow 75lbs and pay only in acceleration and battery life; her weight won’t significantly contribute to the max load rating of the scooter.

    Second, the bigger issue I’d worry about is breaking. Maybe it’d be OK; that’s where the load bearing rating would be important.

    • nocturne@slrpnk.netOP
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      2 days ago

      I am 250ish, the majority I saw were 265 weight limit. I carry a rather heavy backpack, so even without the dog in the equation I would want something around 300.

        • LadyMeow@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          2 days ago

          How much are the ones lime or whatever use? Their load rating must be wild, because I’ve seen at least 3 people ride one at the same time…

  • litchralee@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    Given the payload requirement and the trailer, would an electric bike be acceptable? Yes, it would be larger but is also more dynamically stable than an e-scooter at the same speed. And the bike trailer wouldn’t need much changed at all to attach to a bike.

    For an all-in-one solution, an electric trike might also work, with the benefit that your dog can ride in the basket straddling the rear axle. Although electric trikes don’t tend to come in below $1k USD.

    • nocturne@slrpnk.netOP
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      2 days ago

      I am steering away from an e-bike because in the off season when I can let her run with me, I want the scooter over the bike.

      I remember when razr scooters were the thing to have and my kids had them. I loved riding theirs but always wanted a grown up sized one.

      But if I am unable to find an escooter, I may go the bike route

  • voicesarefree@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    If there is a scooter claiming all that, under $1000, you would probably be at greater risk of dying while riding it vs scooters from companies you could sue for liability and will state their specs appropriately.

    • nocturne@slrpnk.netOP
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      2 days ago

      She has thermal boots, but even with those I worry at the temps we get when I can feel the heat through my shoes.