Forum Discussion
RoyB
Mar 12, 2017Explorer II
The trailer brakes will adjust just the car/truck brakes do. Use the standard brake tool and spin the wheel and keep adjusting until you just put drag on the moving wheel. Then back off the adj just a tad.
A good way to tell if the electric brakes are engaging I found using my trusty ole boy scout compass works... Have someone use the brake level knob and the compass will move when the brake magnet gets power... Do that for each of the brake magnets...
Some brake magnets emit a low level tone when engaged. Both my trailers do that here...
Sometimes you have to physically move the wheel a 1/4 or 1/2 turn before the electric brakes will engage...
If you have clamp-on DC Current meter on the wire lead feeding each brake magnet you will read around 3AMPS DC CURRENT when a full 12VDC is applied to each brake magnet. That be 6AMPS total for a single axle or 12AMPS total for a dual axle.
Roy Ken
A good way to tell if the electric brakes are engaging I found using my trusty ole boy scout compass works... Have someone use the brake level knob and the compass will move when the brake magnet gets power... Do that for each of the brake magnets...
Some brake magnets emit a low level tone when engaged. Both my trailers do that here...
Sometimes you have to physically move the wheel a 1/4 or 1/2 turn before the electric brakes will engage...
If you have clamp-on DC Current meter on the wire lead feeding each brake magnet you will read around 3AMPS DC CURRENT when a full 12VDC is applied to each brake magnet. That be 6AMPS total for a single axle or 12AMPS total for a dual axle.
Roy Ken
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