MFL wrote:
You may have some chaffed wires inside the axle tube, or right at entry hole into tube, causing a short, if you are actually experiencing intermittent braking, as indicated on your controller.
Jerry
I agree, this is very possible on a 2004 camper. The insulation becomes very brittle over time and there is the chaffing going on grounding out the hot brake wire inside the axle tube going down the road. Depending on how bad the insulation is ground off, even the + and - brake wire inside the tube can to short within itself. Do not have to touch the tube.
If you are standing still and the issue is still there, this helps trouble shoot the problem. If your meter has ohms on it, check both the hot power brake wire to ground and also for open loop, check the ground connections for having high resistance. Check the resistance through an actual coil so you know what the coil resistance is. Then when checking the hot wire to frame ground if the resistance is less then the coil itself (which is not a lot) then you know somewhere you have a leak to ground. You may end up breaking the connections apart to isolate the problem.
Corrosion on the frame where the brakes ground at to can cause an open circuit. Also the ground up front where the 7 wire truck cable grounds to. Corrosion is bad news on a brake circuit. The best method is to run a complete ground wire attached where the truck 7 wire ground is at all the way to the brake coils.
Hope this helps
John
PS. If there are any scotch lock connections on any brake wires, get them out of there. That is a problem waiting to happen. These things
2005 Ford F350 Super Duty, 4x4; 6.8L V10 with 4.10 RA, 21,000 GCWR, 11,000 GVWR, upgraded 2 1/2" Towbeast Receiver. Hitched with a 1,700# Reese HP WD, HP Dual Cam to a 2004 Sunline Solaris T310R travel trailer.