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On Tue, 19 Jul 2005 10:18:07 -0400, "Gene Kearns"
wrote: On Mon, 18 Jul 2005 23:16:02 -0700, "Mr Wizzard" wrote: Can you explain this to me? ...Or explain your thoery on why not releasing surge brakes caused all this apparatus to fail ? (I don't know jack about surge brakes), but it would seem to me that if you tried to back up a trailer with brakes on that it would be hop, skip, and jumping all around the place, and generally lettung you know that the brakes are on. Basically, you are correct... bottom line is, you have to give a sh*t. Every time I have observed this problem has been soon after maintenance or yard related moves. If you have a big enough tow vehicle, you can muscle around even the largest trailers and that bends backing plates. strains brake pads, and torques the axles and springs.... FYI, a surge brake system doesn't know the difference between wishing to stop or slow down the trailer and backing a trailer up.... it only senses pressure and applies the brakes if the tow vehicle and trailer push against each other. In that sense, there is a solenoid that actuates when the back-up lights are energized on the tow vehicle that prevents hydraulic pressure from the brake cylinder to pass on to the wheel cylinders and the trailer freewheels backwards. If the tow vehicle operator doesn't have a way of energizing this solenoid, the inevitable result is backing the trailer against the brakes.... and the harder it is to back the trailer and the larger the tow vehicle, the more likely the damage.... Also, I lost track of how any of this was caused by water etc. (something about the solenoids?) The solenoid is electrically actuated from the tow vehicle back-up lights. Depending on the wiring harness, it may or may not be possible to disconnect the lights (during immersion) without disconnecting the wire to the back-up solenoid.... and, thus, forcing the operator to back-up against the brake pressure. These surge brakes must be different on bigger trailers. Every surge brake that I have ever seen on smaller (3,000 to 5,000 lb boats) boat trailers are free wheeling in reverse specifically for that reason (of course these were all drum brakes, if that makes any difference). The Other Dave Hall |
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