AH64ID
TDR MEMBER
Let me start off by saying that I am not looking for advice on getting a MaxBrake or Brake Smart. I realize the benefits of them, but also the downfall. I am not willing to get a trailer brake controller that will not match the braking energy of the exhaust brake. I spend too much time with trailer brakes matching the exhaust brake and not using the service brakes.
Okay, so here is the deal. I have a Prodigy P2, and have had it for many years. It has always been very smooth and proportionate with any trailer I have towed. I recently sold my 22' TT and got a 29'TT. At low speeds the 29' is VERY jerky, so I have to adjust the power up and down on the brake depending on loading, etc.
What I have noticed is that when the trailer has full water, full food, and camping gear it's much smoother. It's the jerkiest on the way home from a weekend of camping. It's only jerky at low speeds, at city/highway speeds its fine, but at parking lot speeds it will jerk quite a bit, and feed off the jerking as the proportional sensor is reacting to the jerking.
So specs on the trailer are about 7Klbs on the axles fully loaded and about 6K on the return trip. The trailer has a pair of 5,200 lb axles. So my thinking is that with the axles only at 70% max loading the brakes are over-sized and thus any light load will get them to grab. On my old trailer I had 3,000lb axles and about 5,000 lbs on the axles, or about 85% loaded, and much smaller brakes.
The reason I don't feel a controller will fix it is because the voltage to the brakes is less than 1. 0 when it occurs, and I can get them to jerk with a constant voltage, smoothly applied with the manual lever. It doesn't jerk quite as bad because the controller doesn't feed off the jerkiness and get worse.
So am I guessing correct with the brake size and loading?
Thanks
Okay, so here is the deal. I have a Prodigy P2, and have had it for many years. It has always been very smooth and proportionate with any trailer I have towed. I recently sold my 22' TT and got a 29'TT. At low speeds the 29' is VERY jerky, so I have to adjust the power up and down on the brake depending on loading, etc.
What I have noticed is that when the trailer has full water, full food, and camping gear it's much smoother. It's the jerkiest on the way home from a weekend of camping. It's only jerky at low speeds, at city/highway speeds its fine, but at parking lot speeds it will jerk quite a bit, and feed off the jerking as the proportional sensor is reacting to the jerking.
So specs on the trailer are about 7Klbs on the axles fully loaded and about 6K on the return trip. The trailer has a pair of 5,200 lb axles. So my thinking is that with the axles only at 70% max loading the brakes are over-sized and thus any light load will get them to grab. On my old trailer I had 3,000lb axles and about 5,000 lbs on the axles, or about 85% loaded, and much smaller brakes.
The reason I don't feel a controller will fix it is because the voltage to the brakes is less than 1. 0 when it occurs, and I can get them to jerk with a constant voltage, smoothly applied with the manual lever. It doesn't jerk quite as bad because the controller doesn't feed off the jerkiness and get worse.
So am I guessing correct with the brake size and loading?
Thanks