Olsy wrote:
Thanks, thats what i was thinking, i hope they dont need replacing. I am having problems with my brake controller and need to know size so i can deteine what resistance i should be reading. Thanks for the input
Typically brake magnets will draw a max of 3A and as far as I know that is across the board for all drum brake magnets.
3A at 12V is equivalent to 4 Ohms per magnet (use Ohm's law to solve E (voltage)/I (current)=R (resistance) the problem).
If you have a single axle then you would have two magnets, the resistance would be 2 ohms in this case.
The problem is that most Ohm meters simply are not accurate at this low of resistance AND on top of this is the consideration that you are dealing with coils of wire which may or may not be 100% dead on with the 4 Ohms to start with.
Now toss in the shoddy wiring practices used on trailers which often have multiple spices using non sealed crimps, broken wires or even shorted wires inside the axle tube.
Personally, I would highly recommend saving a lot of time and frustration and scrapping the entire brake wiring on the trailer. It simply is not worth your time or aggravation.
Run a new set of wires from the tongue back to the axle, do not use the wire INSIDE the axle. Instead use a bunch of wire ties and run the wire across the top of the axle ON THE OUTSIDE (wires inside the axle tube tend to move about and eventually leads to chaffing causing intermittent shorting.
Use a bigger gauge of wire than what the manufacturer used, 10 ga is my favorite, use stranded wire do not use solid wire.
Make sure you use weather proof splices for the connections to the magnets.
Additionally inspect the magnet wires inside the drums for any signs of chaffing (if any chaffing found you can simply add some heatshrink tubing to cover the affected area).