โJan-29-2020 05:57 AM
โFeb-02-2020 10:18 AM
JIMNLIN wrote:drsteve wrote:
Trucks have big brakes so that you can go to the landscape supply yard, load 3000 lb of gravel in the bed, and still be able to stop in a reasonable distance.
It's not always about towing.
Good point.
And evident of truck camper owners carrying a 4k-6k TC on a '20 3500 DRW GM with 6k fawr and 10500 rawr. Thats 16500 lb of braking performance at a minimum.
The truck may weigh in the 9000 lb range so the owner has over 7k lb of braking performance to play with.
Dangz ...GM sure raised the bars with those big 10500 lb rawr numbers on the new '20 trucks.
โFeb-02-2020 07:23 AM
drsteve wrote:
Trucks have big brakes so that you can go to the landscape supply yard, load 3000 lb of gravel in the bed, and still be able to stop in a reasonable distance.
It's not always about towing.
โFeb-01-2020 10:54 PM
โFeb-01-2020 05:03 PM
โFeb-01-2020 07:37 AM
โJan-30-2020 10:39 AM
Mickeyfan0805 wrote:Terryallan wrote:Mickeyfan0805 wrote:Terryallan wrote:Mickeyfan0805 wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
My opinion and experience is they each stop them selves if each are in good shape.
And the other -in an emergency. Brake lines blew on the TV when trying to avoid an idiot who cut me off on the interstate last summer. It was the trailer brakes that got us to safety!
Could you not use your parking / E brake on the truck? Those are operated mechanically. Have a cable that pulls them on.
In the moment of slamming on the brakes, there would not have been time. It was the fact that I had a hydraulic controller on the Suburban that kept activating the trailer brakes even after losing the TV brakes trailer kept slowing enough to avoid a wreck. From there, e-brakes could have worked, but didn't need to. The trailer brakes worked flawlessly to draw us to safety.
So it probably wouldn't have worked with a normal proportional brake controler. they only apply the brakes as much as they feel the TV braking. Good to know.
Just wondering. Did you gear it down to help the brakes to stop it? Easy to think of all this stuff while it isn't happening I know. Just thinking what I would do if it ever happened to me. A learning experience if you will.
I am not entirely sure regarding the proportional controller. I think you are right that it wouldn't have worked in this manner. That said, some might have a manual override that would allow you to accomplish the same thing by engaging the controller manually. I haven't had a proportional controller in 8 years, and only had that for 18 months, so I don't remember for sure.
As for gearing, it wasn't necessary. The lines really weren't bad enough that they should have blown (the guy at the shop was shocked). I really had to jam the brakes to avoid the other car, and the truck slowed significantly before the lines blew - at which time we were already moving pretty slowly. From there it was simply a slow crawl to safety.
โJan-30-2020 10:36 AM
opnspaces wrote:SweetLou wrote:Terryallan wrote:crasster wrote:
I've read many times that exceeding GCVWR is a stopping safety issue.
What I'm not understanding is the GCVWR assuming there are NOT electric brakes?
Is it assuming trailer brake failure and the vehicle's GCVWR can fully stop both trailer and TV?
From my experience, a well tuned brake controller the brakes just feel like stopping without a load at all.
So how does exceeding GCVWR cause a safety issue stopping with electric brakes?
Just curious, not doing it.
Actually. Your tow vehicles brakes are only designed to stop the GVWR of the vehicle. NOT the GCVWR. that is why trailer brakes are required. So your TV can safely stop it's own max weight (GVWR). Anything over that the trailer brakes are supposed to stop.
Yes the TV brakes may stop the trailer. Eventually. But not safely, especially in a E stop.
This is the correct answer!!
I disagree with the above statements. As embarrassing as it is to say I have been guilty of once forgetting to plug the umbilical in when coming home from a camping trip. I made a 1.5 hour highway speed drive with 4 complete stops and several slowing for mountain highway curves and never even realized the trailer was unplugged. It was only before I hit the last steep downhill that I remembered and pulled over to plug the trailer in. And the brakes had been working so well up to this point that I debated not stopping at all and just going home.
Yes my trailer brakes do work and I can definitely feel it when they engage. My point is that the brakes on a properly sized tow vehicle will stop the trailer as well.
โJan-30-2020 10:25 AM
Terryallan wrote:Mickeyfan0805 wrote:Terryallan wrote:Mickeyfan0805 wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
My opinion and experience is they each stop them selves if each are in good shape.
And the other -in an emergency. Brake lines blew on the TV when trying to avoid an idiot who cut me off on the interstate last summer. It was the trailer brakes that got us to safety!
Could you not use your parking / E brake on the truck? Those are operated mechanically. Have a cable that pulls them on.
In the moment of slamming on the brakes, there would not have been time. It was the fact that I had a hydraulic controller on the Suburban that kept activating the trailer brakes even after losing the TV brakes trailer kept slowing enough to avoid a wreck. From there, e-brakes could have worked, but didn't need to. The trailer brakes worked flawlessly to draw us to safety.
So it probably wouldn't have worked with a normal proportional brake controler. they only apply the brakes as much as they feel the TV braking. Good to know.
Just wondering. Did you gear it down to help the brakes to stop it? Easy to think of all this stuff while it isn't happening I know. Just thinking what I would do if it ever happened to me. A learning experience if you will.
โJan-30-2020 06:55 AM
SweetLou wrote:Terryallan wrote:crasster wrote:
I've read many times that exceeding GCVWR is a stopping safety issue.
What I'm not understanding is the GCVWR assuming there are NOT electric brakes?
Is it assuming trailer brake failure and the vehicle's GCVWR can fully stop both trailer and TV?
From my experience, a well tuned brake controller the brakes just feel like stopping without a load at all.
So how does exceeding GCVWR cause a safety issue stopping with electric brakes?
Just curious, not doing it.
Actually. Your tow vehicles brakes are only designed to stop the GVWR of the vehicle. NOT the GCVWR. that is why trailer brakes are required. So your TV can safely stop it's own max weight (GVWR). Anything over that the trailer brakes are supposed to stop.
Yes the TV brakes may stop the trailer. Eventually. But not safely, especially in a E stop.
This is the correct answer!!
โJan-30-2020 06:38 AM
Mickeyfan0805 wrote:Terryallan wrote:Mickeyfan0805 wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
My opinion and experience is they each stop them selves if each are in good shape.
And the other -in an emergency. Brake lines blew on the TV when trying to avoid an idiot who cut me off on the interstate last summer. It was the trailer brakes that got us to safety!
Could you not use your parking / E brake on the truck? Those are operated mechanically. Have a cable that pulls them on.
In the moment of slamming on the brakes, there would not have been time. It was the fact that I had a hydraulic controller on the Suburban that kept activating the trailer brakes even after losing the TV brakes trailer kept slowing enough to avoid a wreck. From there, e-brakes could have worked, but didn't need to. The trailer brakes worked flawlessly to draw us to safety.
โJan-30-2020 06:35 AM
Terryallan wrote:Mickeyfan0805 wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
My opinion and experience is they each stop them selves if each are in good shape.
And the other -in an emergency. Brake lines blew on the TV when trying to avoid an idiot who cut me off on the interstate last summer. It was the trailer brakes that got us to safety!
Could you not use your parking / E brake on the truck? Those are operated mechanically. Have a cable that pulls them on.
โJan-30-2020 05:23 AM
Terryallan wrote:Mickeyfan0805 wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
My opinion and experience is they each stop them selves if each are in good shape.
And the other -in an emergency. Brake lines blew on the TV when trying to avoid an idiot who cut me off on the interstate last summer. It was the trailer brakes that got us to safety!
Could you not use your parking / E brake on the truck? Those are operated mechanically. Have a cable that pulls them on.
โJan-30-2020 04:59 AM
ScottG wrote:
The brakes on the vehicle help stop the trailer and this is designed into the vehicle. That's why trucks have such huge brakes for their size. Notice the brakes on trucks have gotten bigger over the years? Not because the trucks themselves are that much heavier, it's because they can tow much more than they used to.
The more weight you add to a given setup, the longer the stopping distance.
I have upgraded brakes on my truck and it stops the whole 17K# load faster.
BTW, I have seen both Ford and GM write about this very subject and they make it clear that the trucks are part of the formula and have a major impact on stopping the trailer. So yes, it is clearly part of the certification or more accurately, it's part of the design criteria.
โJan-30-2020 04:40 AM