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How long should the break-away brake cable be?

Sinnettc
Explorer
Explorer
The break away cable on my boat trailer, with an attwood surge brake coupler, is maybe 3 feet long and doesn't have a lot of slack when it's connected to one of the safety chain holes in the hitch. It's short enough that I suspect it would trigger the brakes if the hitch comes off the ball.

The one on my Trail Cruiser TT is much longer and nearly drags on the ground when it's hooked the same way but it's too short to go around the bumper or anything else. Are the brakes supposed to come on if your tongue drops onto the safety chains or is it only supposed to trigger the brakes if the entire thing comes loose? If the former, how do I figure out how long it needs to be to trip the brakes?

Thanks.
1995 Chevy Silverado K1500 4x4 short bed
2010 Trail Cruiser 23QBC
2001 Catalina Capri 22 sailboat "Verboten"
15 REPLIES 15

dannytas
Explorer
Explorer
wmoses wrote:
WE3ZS wrote:
To add to the good advice already given, I was always tought to connect the break away cable to the TVs frame, not the hitch in case of a hitch failure.

That is what I learned also.


We all must have the same teacher!! :C
2014 Keystone Springdale 202QBWE
1998 Dodge 1500 Club Cab, 4x4, 5.9 magnum
DW-Lynn
BigDog-Kelley
LittleDog-Kroozer
LittleCats-Pokie and Dottie

mowin
Explorer
Explorer
dodge guy wrote:
mowin wrote:
LarryJM wrote:
BarneyS wrote:
There has been much good discussion on that topic here on the forums in the past. Click here to see some of the posts by member JBarca, who has done extensive research into this area and has posted many times about it.
Barney


AND

Ron Gratz wrote:
Adding to what John Barca has posted --

The instructions from brakeaway switch manufacturer, Warner Electric, state on page 4:

"

Position the breakaway switch on the trailer frame with the pin pointing toward the towing vehicle.
Allow sufficient lanyard length to attach the lanyard to the towing vehicle.
The lanyard should be long enough to allow for turning corners,
yet short enough to disengage the pin from the switch before the safety chains on the hitch become taut in a trailer disconnect situation.

" (bold added for emphasis)

Ron


These are IMO also are THE CORRECT ANSWERS:B

Larry


X3. It is NOT intended to activate on a complete brake away from the tv. It should activate before safety chains are taut.


Why?


Because thats how there supposed to work...Think about it, its not rocket science, if trailer becomes disconnected from tv, emergency brakes should come on asap, not IF theres a total disconnect. Feel free to use 'em whatever way you want...

dodge_guy
Explorer II
Explorer II
mowin wrote:
LarryJM wrote:
BarneyS wrote:
There has been much good discussion on that topic here on the forums in the past. Click here to see some of the posts by member JBarca, who has done extensive research into this area and has posted many times about it.
Barney


AND

Ron Gratz wrote:
Adding to what John Barca has posted --

The instructions from brakeaway switch manufacturer, Warner Electric, state on page 4:

"

Position the breakaway switch on the trailer frame with the pin pointing toward the towing vehicle.
Allow sufficient lanyard length to attach the lanyard to the towing vehicle.
The lanyard should be long enough to allow for turning corners,
yet short enough to disengage the pin from the switch before the safety chains on the hitch become taut in a trailer disconnect situation.

" (bold added for emphasis)

Ron


These are IMO also are THE CORRECT ANSWERS:B

Larry


X3. It is NOT intended to activate on a complete brake away from the tv. It should activate before safety chains are taut.


Why?
Wife Kim
Son Brandon 17yrs
Daughter Marissa 16yrs
Dog Bailey

12 Forest River Georgetown 350TS Hellwig sway bars, BlueOx TrueCenter stabilizer

13 Ford Explorer Roadmaster Stowmaster 5000, VIP Tow>
A bad day camping is
better than a good day at work!

Highway_4x4
Explorer
Explorer
Has anyone here ever used the breakaway safety device? How was it set and what was the result? I have never used mine and don't know of anyone that has. I have seen piles of what was a TT by the side of the road.
2014 Ram Cummins Laramie, Crew cab, 4x4, Loaded, Snugtop camper
2014 OutdoorsRV Wind River 250RDSW
Big spoiled Bernese Mountain Dog

mowin
Explorer
Explorer
LarryJM wrote:
BarneyS wrote:
There has been much good discussion on that topic here on the forums in the past. Click here to see some of the posts by member JBarca, who has done extensive research into this area and has posted many times about it.
Barney


AND

Ron Gratz wrote:
Adding to what John Barca has posted --

The instructions from brakeaway switch manufacturer, Warner Electric, state on page 4:

"

Position the breakaway switch on the trailer frame with the pin pointing toward the towing vehicle.
Allow sufficient lanyard length to attach the lanyard to the towing vehicle.
The lanyard should be long enough to allow for turning corners,
yet short enough to disengage the pin from the switch before the safety chains on the hitch become taut in a trailer disconnect situation.

" (bold added for emphasis)

Ron


These are IMO also are THE CORRECT ANSWERS:B

Larry


X3. It is NOT intended to activate on a complete brake away from the tv. It should activate before safety chains are taut.

GaryWT
Explorer
Explorer
I actually coil the cord one or two loops so it does not drag on the ground and to keep it from the chains or anything that can pinch it or break it.
ME '63, DW 64, (DS 89 tents on his own, DD 92 not so much), DS 95
2013 Premier Bullet 31 BHPR 2014 F350 Crew Cab 6.2L 3.73

LarryJM
Explorer II
Explorer II
BarneyS wrote:
There has been much good discussion on that topic here on the forums in the past. Click here to see some of the posts by member JBarca, who has done extensive research into this area and has posted many times about it.
Barney


AND

Ron Gratz wrote:
Adding to what John Barca has posted --

The instructions from brakeaway switch manufacturer, Warner Electric, state on page 4:

"

Position the breakaway switch on the trailer frame with the pin pointing toward the towing vehicle.
Allow sufficient lanyard length to attach the lanyard to the towing vehicle.
The lanyard should be long enough to allow for turning corners,
yet short enough to disengage the pin from the switch before the safety chains on the hitch become taut in a trailer disconnect situation.

" (bold added for emphasis)

Ron


These are IMO also are THE CORRECT ANSWERS:B

Larry
2001 standard box 7.3L E-350 PSD Van with 4.10 rear and 2007 Holiday Rambler Aluma-Lite 8306S Been RV'ing since 1974.
RAINKAP INSTALL////ETERNABOND INSTALL

Ron_Gratz
Explorer
Explorer
Adding to what John Barca has posted --

The instructions from brakeaway switch manufacturer, Warner Electric, state on page 4:

"

Position the breakaway switch on the trailer frame with the pin pointing toward the towing vehicle.
Allow sufficient lanyard length to attach the lanyard to the towing vehicle.
The lanyard should be long enough to allow for turning corners,
yet short enough to disengage the pin from the switch before the safety chains on the hitch become taut in a trailer disconnect situation.

" (bold added for emphasis)

Ron

BarneyS
Explorer III
Explorer III
There has been much good discussion on that topic here on the forums in the past. Click here to see some of the posts by member JBarca, who has done extensive research into this area and has posted many times about it.
Barney
2004 Sunnybrook Titan 30FKS TT
Hensley "Arrow" 1400# hitch (Sold)
Not towing now.
Former tow vehicles were 2016 Ram 2500 CTD, 2002 Ford F250, 7.3 PSD, 1997 Ram 2500 5.9 gas engine

wmoses
Explorer
Explorer
WE3ZS wrote:
To add to the good advice already given, I was always tought to connect the break away cable to the TVs frame, not the hitch in case of a hitch failure.

That is what I learned also.
Regards,
Wayne
2014 Flagstaff Super Lite 27RLWS Emerald Ed. | Equal-i-zer 1200/12,000 4-point WDH
2010 GMC Sierra 1500 SLE 5.3L 6-speed auto | K&N Filter | Hypertech Max Energy tune | Prodigy P3
_

WE3ZS
Explorer II
Explorer II
To add to the good advice already given, I was always tought to connect the break away cable to the TVs frame, not the hitch in case of a hitch failure.

dodge_guy
Explorer II
Explorer II
Yep exactly. You want the breakaway to actuate in the event of a complete seperation.
Wife Kim
Son Brandon 17yrs
Daughter Marissa 16yrs
Dog Bailey

12 Forest River Georgetown 350TS Hellwig sway bars, BlueOx TrueCenter stabilizer

13 Ford Explorer Roadmaster Stowmaster 5000, VIP Tow>
A bad day camping is
better than a good day at work!

Sinnettc
Explorer
Explorer
Thanks guys, that makes sense. Especially since the 7-pin cable on the TT is quite a bit longer than the one on the boat trailer.
1995 Chevy Silverado K1500 4x4 short bed
2010 Trail Cruiser 23QBC
2001 Catalina Capri 22 sailboat "Verboten"

Old-Biscuit
Explorer III
Explorer III
If trailer jumps the ball and is caught by safety chains pigtail is probably still plugged in so truck brake controller will still activate the trailer brakes.

The emergency brake cable is to activate trailer brakes on trailers that have become disconnected from tow vehicle.
Cable should be slightly longer than pigtail so that it is pulled out of switch engaging trailer brakes when pigtail is pulled out of truck plug.
Is it time for your medication or mine?


2007 DODGE 3500 QC SRW 5.9L CTD In-Bed 'quiet gen'
2007 HitchHiker II 32.5 UKTG 2000W Xantex Inverter
US NAVY------USS Decatur DDG31