wallynm wrote:
Ours has failed twice. How did I know. The last time we were leaving Flaming Gorge Bridge and Dam. On the steep grades I could feel that the DP was not slowing down as it normally did. On inspection it had failed and I returned it to the factory for servicing.
Rice wrote:
msmith1199 wrote:
So before all the hate starts I have to add the disclaimer here, I'm just telling you what the law is. Brakebuddy and all those others know good and well they are lying on their websites but they do it anyway. I would recommend that if you have a heavy toad or a light motorhome or a combination of the two, that you get aux brakes on your toad. But if you have a heavy DP and a light toad, do what you feel comfortable with.
Thanks for the info about what the laws actually are. It's interesting.
My issue with braking systems is that nobody ever acknowledges that braking systems can and do break or cause problems. So it's never, as a lot of people seem to assert, just a case of "Will it do any good whatsoever?" Instead, the question should be, "Will it do enough good to outweigh the cost and the possible problems it could actually cause?"
Even without a TOAD, there is a lot of fade on the brakes in a DP. I have had some real white knuckle times having to stop quickly and was able to but the fade is more than I would expect.
Also, I can certainly understand the TOAD pushing the coach. I grew up in Denver, lived in Los Alamos, and currently live in the Springs. This means I use my DP to travel all over the Rockies. I felt the Wrangler pushing my coach on 285 dropping into Denver. Immediately bought my Roadmaster brake box. Next time down the pass, I could still feel the Wrangler pushing me. Seems that the air is so thing above 9000ft that the box doesn't work. Hmmmmm. Other than the mountains, the box is nearly useless on the normal setting and it hard on the TOAD on aggressive settings. I certainly do not want my Wrangler trying to pull my coach to a stop.
Laws and physics. I am sure I will get some comments on laws and physics. My science experiment is to take the weight of the coach, add the dinghy, look at the total. The GCWR on my coach is 42,500 lbs. Laws and science say that the manufacturer says my coach will pull and stop that much weight. If you get into an accident, are they going to look at how many pans were loaded and what the weight of each toothpick is? There is also your tanks. All four tanks full (275 gallons) at 8lbs a gallon is 2200 lbs of liquid. That is substantial. Bottom line, as long as you are under the gross weights, the MH is designed to start and stop it.
I do like the brake box for the breakaway feature. And I do use my brake box. Watching and feeling how much it works, not sure about that. I would like to do a 60mph stop with and without the box and see how much difference there is. Could be eye opening. The supp brakes are very expensive, so does the cost outweigh the benefit?
WW