I am not at all impressed with trailer disc brakes. I pulled several of them when I was transporting and did not like them. The discs absolutely can provide great stopping power, of that there is no doubt. You can grab the override button on your brake controller at 60 mph and look in your rear view mirrows to see the tire smoke.
But, unless the disc brake systems have improved significantly in the last three years disc brakes produce an inherent delay between the time the driver pushes the tow vehicle foot brake or the override on the brake controller and the time the trailer brakes actually begin braking. I found that delay very scary when pulling a heavy trailer on an LA freeway or on the interstate in a big city with heavy traffic. The delay was something like two or three seconds before trailer braking occured. A 24,000 lbs. truck and trailer can travel a very long distance at 60 mph in rush hour traffic before braking is applied. I read an article several years ago in Trailer Life magazine that discussed that delay back when hydraulic disc brakes for RV trailers were first introduced. When I towed trailers with that option I understood what they were talking about.
The reason the delay is present is the time it takes for an electric hydraulic pump to create hydraulic pressure. The trailer braking system does not and can not operate like truck hydraulic brakes because it is not safe to physically connect the hydraulic lines of the tow vehicle to the hydaulic brake lines of the trailer. No hydraulic braking pressure is present until an electric signal reaches the electric hydraulic pump and the pump spins up and generates pressure to the calipers. This takes time.
Instead of ordering the hydraulic disc brake option on my HitchHiker fiver when I bought it in '07, I paid a few hundred dollars for the larger self-adjusting Dexter brakes. They are something like 2 1/4" by 13" instead of 2" by 12".
Combined with a BrakeSmart brake controller, my HH has outstanding brakes.