Crikey - does that make it about five that we have heard about in the last week? Please take care out there, and stay safe.
Thanks for posting, and the advice TAJ - hope some heed it!
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jules "Love is good for the human being!!" (Ben, aged 10)
You can use your gears to keep the tug slower but that doesn't do anything for the caravan... what to do? Use the Electric caravan brakes separately?
Gday...
This may prompt others to tell me I'm wrong but ... I have always had the electric brakes on the van set so they come on before the vehicle brakes are actually slowing the vehicle.
That way, when going down a hill, in an appropriate gear to "hold the load", a slight touch of the vehicle's brakes, activates the van brakes providing a slight "pulling" effect on the vehicle, therefore enhancing the stability of the whole rig.
It is always best to not 'ride' the brakes (of either the vehicle or van) but to apply them for short bursts - e.g. in the straight, brake on for say one or two seconds then off again, brake on for one or two seconds then off again. It is best to do ALL the braking BEFORE you begin turning into and through the curve. Do not brake once you have entered a bend/curve.
That means having a slow (even if it is too slow) entry then initially coast into the bend and GENTLY apply the accelerator to stabilise the rig and drive through and out of the curve.
Cheers - and happy and safe travelling - John
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2006 Discovery 3 TDV6 SE Auto - 2008 23ft Golden Eagle Hunter Some people feel the rain - the others just get wet - Bob Dylan
We drove down there last Sunday and a car and van past us at great speed . Half expected to see him in a mess further down but saw no sign of him. He was lucky as a highway patrol had pulled another car over . The trucks have to engage low gear that should apply to cars and vans too.
Yep I recon this is about the fifth accident this week that one of us has reported via here,just makes one wonder how many more happen around Oz that we don't hear about...At this rate between the insurance companies/police dept and gov dept I can only see some new legistration being implemented for anyone towing any thing more than a box trailer.
Some thing like they have now ...you can ride a scooter with just a car licence, but you need a bike licence to tide a 125cc bike, ..Trouble is some of these new scooters are as fast as the 125cc bike.
We've had a caravan tyre blow out going down Mt Ousley and there's nowhere to stop until you're at the bottom! Yes, my hubby uses his gears in low just as a truck has to, to do that mountain and any other mountain.
Wow! I've just checked the Wollongong paper. How did they come to be on separate sides of the median strip barricade?
Whilst it would probably be interesting to see the insurance figures - eg which 'make' has the most claims - perhaps it could be biased given Jayco as a 'brand' has something like 70% of the van sales in OZ so they would be 'higher incidence' of claims ... even if number per 100 of vans registered may 'colour' given the high number of Jayco.
And even that needs to be 'purified' by categorising by 'reason for claim' - mechanical failure/tyre failure/operator error/weather conditions - it gets unwieldy, doesn't it
Cheers - John
-- Edited by rockylizard on Saturday 21st of September 2013 10:15:44 PM
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2006 Discovery 3 TDV6 SE Auto - 2008 23ft Golden Eagle Hunter Some people feel the rain - the others just get wet - Bob Dylan
Was just interested in what make the van was,due to my son telling me the other day from the last 12 months insurance claims what brand has had the most accident claims to the ratio of x amount of brand names sold.
That is way the insurance industry has come together on this mater and done the sums (for a better word ) and broken it down to be fair to all brands .
This may prompt others to tell me I'm wrong but ... I have always had the electric brakes on the van set so they come on before the vehicle brakes are actually slowing the vehicle.
That way, when going down a hill, in an appropriate gear to "hold the load", a slight touch of the vehicle's brakes, activates the van brakes providing a slight "pulling" effect on the vehicle, therefore enhancing the stability of the whole rig.
SNIP
Cheers - and happy and safe travelling - John
G'Day John, Could you explain a bit more on how you set the brakes up so they come on before the vehicle brakes - I take it you are using electric brakes and a garden variety controller?
I tried to adjust mine in this manner but found they locked up.
The electric brakes on the van are activated, through the brake controller, by the operation of the brake lights of the vehicle. When the brake lights come on the brake controller begins to send 'signal' to the van brakes.
Usually (at least in the vehicles I have owned) the brake lights come on before the vehicle's brakes are actually retarding the vehicle. Therefore, I set the brakes up on a dirt road, drive at 25kph, touch the brake pedal slightly (to operate brake lights but not retard the vehicle) and the van brakes begin to operate. I then adjust the "power" on the brake controller so that the van brakes come on a slight bit more at that point. Driving at 25kph and setting, re-setting the controller until I get the right "balance". It takes a bit of time.
Final check is drive at 25kph on dirt road, operate the 'manual control' full on quickly and the brakes of the van should lock up - not severely - but lock up. This means that should I need a 'panic stop' the van locks up and drags the vehicle back while the vehicle's brakes are providing full retardation to all four vehicle wheels.
Been doing this for years - going back to towing rally cars on tandem trailers and through into vans.
Cheers - John
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2006 Discovery 3 TDV6 SE Auto - 2008 23ft Golden Eagle Hunter Some people feel the rain - the others just get wet - Bob Dylan
Thanks John, My P3 Prodigy only allows proportional braking - activating the brake lights does not apply the van brakes as it's the actual interia from slowing that supplies the power to the van brakes. It would be nice if the van brakes could be applied a micro second before the tug brakes but I guess this is really not possible at least with my controller.