baxter462
Member
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- Location
- Salt Lake City Utah
So, I've seen a lot of threads involving trailer brakes on military trailers when towed with a civilian truck. It seems like people are doing everything from axle swaps, retrofitting electric brakes on the existing trailer axle, replacing the air over hydraulic system on the trailer with and electric over hydraulic setup, installing a surge brake coupler, installing a trailer air brake system on their tow vehicle, etc. None of these options are ideal to me because I want to be able to tow any of my trailers, with any of my vehicles, including my M923A2. I also want family members/friends to be able to tow my M105A2 with their pickup trucks. This basically means that I had to find or create a solution so I could tow any trailer with any vehicle, without making any modifications to any of them. I ended up designing an "interface device" to accomplish this. I have started building it, and it is looking very promising. Here's a quick video of it thus far:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjG1yR_PXPY
Pretty much all that remains is to package it up nicely and thoroughly test it. I think it'll accomplish exactly what I need it to do. I'll be able to use any trailer with any truck, and just move this device around from vehicle to vehicle as needed. I am still trying to decide exactly how I want to package everything together to keep it portable and compact, but the hard part is finished. It functions very well with the testing that I've done so far.
Here are some of the features I designed into it:
I'm excited, it is coming along nicely. I'll post updates as I make progress.
Now, for the disclaimers: No, I'm not producing and selling it, I am just building one for myself. Yes, I understand it isn't D.O.T. approved and there is liability involved in using it (although I personally think there is a lot less risk to this solution compared to most other available solutions. This actually meets the trailer brake requirements in my state because they just specify what needs to happen, not how it is being accomplished). Can you build one of your own? Of course you can. If I can build one, you can too.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjG1yR_PXPY
Pretty much all that remains is to package it up nicely and thoroughly test it. I think it'll accomplish exactly what I need it to do. I'll be able to use any trailer with any truck, and just move this device around from vehicle to vehicle as needed. I am still trying to decide exactly how I want to package everything together to keep it portable and compact, but the hard part is finished. It functions very well with the testing that I've done so far.
Here are some of the features I designed into it:
- Converts 12V from vehicle lighting circuits to 24V for trailer
- Applies trailer's air brakes proportionally based on input from standard civilian brake controller
- Has an emergency breakaway switch so the device can be attached to the trailer if desired
- Will be packaged in such a way that will allow it to be secured in a pickup truck bed firmly enough to allow the air hoses to be forcibly disconnected in the event of a trailer breakaway to allow for emergency application of the trailer's brakes. Angled gladhand mounts were chosen to make disconnection easier and more likely to occur in the event of a breakaway
- Uses an 18AH onboard SLA battery that gets charged by the vehicle
- The power switch has three positions: On, Off,and Auto. In the Auto position, the vehicle's park lamp switch turns the device on and off. This is a convenience feature. Instead of having to manually turn the device on and off every time you enter/exit the vehicle, you can simply turn the park/head lamps on and off
- Has a manual shutoff valve on the line to the emergency gladhand to allow towing of single hose trailers, and to prevent draining the onboard tank when disconnecting the trailer
I'm excited, it is coming along nicely. I'll post updates as I make progress.
Now, for the disclaimers: No, I'm not producing and selling it, I am just building one for myself. Yes, I understand it isn't D.O.T. approved and there is liability involved in using it (although I personally think there is a lot less risk to this solution compared to most other available solutions. This actually meets the trailer brake requirements in my state because they just specify what needs to happen, not how it is being accomplished). Can you build one of your own? Of course you can. If I can build one, you can too.