Busdriver
Jul 20, 2021Explorer II
Brake Wire
Thinking about running new wire for my Trailer Brakes , just not sure what size wire I should use.? The wire the manufacturer used is very thin.
Vintage465 wrote:
12/2 jacketed brake wire is the proper conductor. I would not go less.
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Gdetrailer wrote:Sjm9911 wrote:
I get the principles and practices, i just figured the manafature has allready considered the drop into the specs. So its designed to work woth the guage it has and to upgrade it will not nessassarly equate better stopping.
The trailer manufacturer only goes by published minimum specs. Those specs are based on total current draw over the distance from the axle manufacturers.
Dexter Axle used to have a chart calling out the MINIMUM wire ga for certain distances for a certain quantity of brake magnets. Not sure if they still have that on their website.
Because the magnets are rated 3A draw at 12V,each axle can draw as much as 6A.
So a single Axle trailer typically is rather short you could get away with a minimum of 16 Ga which would handle the max current of two magnets.
Longer trailers with two axles means you have the potential for 12A at 12V and typically the minimum recommended wire is 14 Ga because of the current.
RV manufacturers let the wire selection go to the frame manufacturer that they buy from (RV manufacturers typically "farm out" the frame building to a third party). That frame manufacturer will typically use the minimum recommended wire ga from the axle manufacturer.
Using the minimum basically is to cover only the max amperage draw, not the best performance.
The brakes will work, just not as well as they would if you were to have less resistance in the wire run.
This gets very apparent with folks who have larger and heavier trailers like 8K-12K 30ft+ trailers. Many of those folks end up scrapping the drum brakes in favor of disc brakes using Electric over Hydraulic system.. Your talking a $1K overhaul of the brakes..
In low voltage world wire resistance is a major problem, with 12V a .1V loss can make the difference of a device working or not working.
The magnets strength is directly affected by how much current flows through it. The current is controlled by the resistance of the magnet and the voltage across the magnet.
If the resistance of the wire going to the magnet is increased, the voltage at the magnet is reduced which reduces the strength of the magnet.
The less strength the magnet has it will not grab the drum surface hard enough to mechanically push the brake shoes against the drum.
That all equals far less effective brakes.
So, in reality, reducing distance of wire and/or increasing the wire size can have a huge impact on improving your drum brakes braking power.
Since you can't shorten the wire length, increasing the wire size is the only way to go.
I have made this mod to two trailers, 20ft and 26ft both dual axle and both rated 7K GVWR, in both cases the wire upgrade resulted in better braking, enough that I was able to reduce the brake controller output considerably.
Mike134 wrote:Sjm9911 wrote:
I will be the on the oposote side. Etrailor recomended 10/2 wire. Way to big and cumbersome to attache to the way smaller wires in the electric brakes. If i had to do it over 16 guage would be enough. I think my original stuff was that big or smaller.
And this is why I compare getting information from a forum the equivalent of asking the folks sitting along the campground bar what they think. Same odds of wrong or right answers
"I'm no expert but I play one online"
Safe travels
larry cad wrote:Sjm9911 wrote:
I will be the on the oposote side. Etrailor recomended 10/2 wire. Way to big and cumbersome to attache to the way smaller wires in the electric brakes. If i had to do it over 16 guage would be enough. I think my original stuff was that big or smaller.
You cannot use a wire size that is the same as the wire size on the brakes. The trailer wire has to carry enough current (amps) to power all the brakes, not just one. Two trailer wheels takes less amps than a 4 wheel trailer. 6 wheel trailer takes more amps than a 4 wheel, and so on.
Most trailer wire harnesses use #10 wire which is rated at 30 amps.
On each individual electric brake magnet the amperage draw would be 3.0 to 3.2 max amps at 12 to 13 volts on 7-inch brake magnets and 3.2 to 4.0 max amps at 12 to 13 volts on 10 and 12-inch brake magnets.
The max amperage draw for the brake magnets on a single axle trailer (2 brakes) would be 6.3 to 6.8 max amps on a 7-inch brake system and 7.5 to 8.2 max amps on 10 and 12-inch brake system. The amps will be higher if using a tandem axle or triple axle trailer.
theoldwizard1 wrote:larry cad wrote:
Most trailer wire harnesses use #10 wire which is rated at 30 amps.
That is for "continuou use" typical household wire. For a short time usage DC circuit less than 50' #10 can easily carry 50A.
larry cad wrote:
Most trailer wire harnesses use #10 wire which is rated at 30 amps.
BruceMc wrote:
All that said, the point isn't necessarily just the wire size, but how its wired. You don't need 10 or 8 gauge wire to each brake, that's overkill. But you do need to consider both the total current on each lead and how it's balanced.
Sjm9911 wrote:
I get the principles and practices, i just figured the manafature has allready considered the drop into the specs. So its designed to work woth the guage it has and to upgrade it will not nessassarly equate better stopping.