2kwik4u
Jetboaters Fleet Admiral
- Messages
- 7,830
- Reaction score
- 10,555
- Points
- 577
- Location
- Buffalo, NY
- Boat Make
- Yamaha
- Year
- 2017
- Boat Model
- AR
- Boat Length
- 19
but like @2kwik4u said I believe the electric ones are eminently better
I've pulled 3-4 different trailers with surge brakes. Probably 5k miles of towing with them. Never again. If a trailer has to be moved with surge brakes, someone else can drive, and I'll meet them there.
One particular instance, pulling my friends 22' Celebrity Cuddy Cabin with dual axles and surge brakes on one. We hit the brakes HARD on the exppressway due to another accident in front of us. It locked the wheels on the trailer instantly, then proceeded to oscillate between locked and free as the truck and trailer bucked against each other at 60+mph. When we got stopped, the rear wheels on the trailer were locked. Had to use low range 4wd to drag the trailer to the shoulder, then spend 2 hours unfreezing the system to get moving again. All was deemed "in good working order" a few weeks prior by the local boat shop.
Similar incident pulling near the limit in my 2003 Yukon. SUV was rated at 7,800lbs, I probably had every bit of 7k behind/in it. Popped over a hill at 65mph and traffic was stopped. I nailed the brakes and locked both the truck and the trailer brakes almost immediately. As the trailer was starting to push the truck out of the way, I was able to reach down to the brake controller, and keep the trailer brakes applied as I released the truck brakes. This let me regain some semblance of control, and steer into the median to avoid the rapidly approaching trunk of a small Kia sedan.
After those two episodes, I'm convinced electric is the way to go in a recreational setting. It's not hard to setup or wire, you remove the "reactive" component, and add an additional layer of control to the mix. My AR190 setup isn't heavy enough to warrant brakes (it's on the edge honestly), but if I get a 240 in the future, I'll be removing the surge system and converting to an electric (possibly electric over hydraulic disc) in short order.