starcrafttom
Active member
II have not installed new brake pads on my trailer in the two years I have owned it. I know bad tom, I just have not had a problem with them yet. Well I had time on Sunday to do maintance. I had two lights out and needed to fill the brake master cylinder and lube the hubs. I figure I would take a look at the pad while I was at it. Well the lights were no problem and adding lube to the hubs was easy. I crawled under the trailer to bleed the brakes and could not get the bleed valves to move at all. I tried wd40 and other stuff but no go. While I was down there I noticed that I had very little pad left on all brakes especially the fronts. I don’t have a big shop and had to take the boat off the trailer in order to get the trailer in to my garage but I would have to clean my garage first and that is a bigger chore at this point with the three or so projects that I have going right now. I decided that I did not want to do the trailer brakes myself and would take the whole thing down to a local guy and have him do it.
So I drop the boat off at the everret ramp, the shop I was using only has 9 ft doors, and ran the trailer to him. My trailer is a king ktb 4000 duel axial with disc brakes. I was told, even before he took off the wheels, that this model has inherit problems with over heating and not being able to push the cylinders back in. I am not sure that the shop in everret was looking out for my best interest, I have no proof they where not, but I have a good b.s. detector. After a short inspection I was told that the calipers were shot and that I need 4 new ones. I was also told that it was a bad design, which I now tend to believe. King has gone to a different unit all together. The new unit is a single piston unit that uses a vented steel rotor not a stainless steel one like mine. Changing over to the new units would cost me $1400. Well needing a $1400 fix on a trailer that is only 2 years old does not make Tommy a happy boy.
Well after a call to E.Q to ask for direction I called king trailers, here in Marysville, to see what they knew. I was told that the brakes are only under warranty for a year and no longer covered and yes they had had problems with them and had started using single piston units with vented rotors. I wanted to take my trailer back to them and have them give me a opinion to whether they needed replaced or not. They tried to fit me in but the shop crew had already left for the day and they could not get to me if they needed fixing until after the New Year. They did recommend Boat country here off the river. They are the local dealer and service center for King Trailers. King would also sell me the replacement units, not the new style, at cost. Boat Country looked at my trailer today and has told me that I only need to replace the two rear calipers and all the pads. This is still going to coat almost $400.
The main problem with the calipers is that the inside pads are held in with screws and if you do not check them often the pads will wear down past the screw heads and then you can not get them out again. You have to tape or drill out the screws and it’s easier to just buy new calipers. Also once the cylinders extend that far out they will not go back in and screw up the seals. Now you may be asking your self “didn’t tom hear those screws grinding into the disc?” well no I did not because they never did make a sound. So even if you have not had any problems with your brakes you may want to check them more often them me. I will now be checking those trailer brakes every other month.
What I can not figure out, other then the cylinders coming out to far, is how wearing the pads down to nothing causes the calipers to fail. I have warn truck pads down to nothing more then once and even had a disc crack and split in half . The dam thing fell off the truck while going down the rode, but never have I had a caliper go bad on me. I was told that the new units being used are more like car brakes. The pads are clipped in not screwed in and the disc are steel not stainless. If I had the funds I would have gone with the new units but it was going to cost $800 even at cost plus labor. I think the stainless steel units will get the job done. They will just have to get more attention then I have been giving them.
So I drop the boat off at the everret ramp, the shop I was using only has 9 ft doors, and ran the trailer to him. My trailer is a king ktb 4000 duel axial with disc brakes. I was told, even before he took off the wheels, that this model has inherit problems with over heating and not being able to push the cylinders back in. I am not sure that the shop in everret was looking out for my best interest, I have no proof they where not, but I have a good b.s. detector. After a short inspection I was told that the calipers were shot and that I need 4 new ones. I was also told that it was a bad design, which I now tend to believe. King has gone to a different unit all together. The new unit is a single piston unit that uses a vented steel rotor not a stainless steel one like mine. Changing over to the new units would cost me $1400. Well needing a $1400 fix on a trailer that is only 2 years old does not make Tommy a happy boy.
Well after a call to E.Q to ask for direction I called king trailers, here in Marysville, to see what they knew. I was told that the brakes are only under warranty for a year and no longer covered and yes they had had problems with them and had started using single piston units with vented rotors. I wanted to take my trailer back to them and have them give me a opinion to whether they needed replaced or not. They tried to fit me in but the shop crew had already left for the day and they could not get to me if they needed fixing until after the New Year. They did recommend Boat country here off the river. They are the local dealer and service center for King Trailers. King would also sell me the replacement units, not the new style, at cost. Boat Country looked at my trailer today and has told me that I only need to replace the two rear calipers and all the pads. This is still going to coat almost $400.
The main problem with the calipers is that the inside pads are held in with screws and if you do not check them often the pads will wear down past the screw heads and then you can not get them out again. You have to tape or drill out the screws and it’s easier to just buy new calipers. Also once the cylinders extend that far out they will not go back in and screw up the seals. Now you may be asking your self “didn’t tom hear those screws grinding into the disc?” well no I did not because they never did make a sound. So even if you have not had any problems with your brakes you may want to check them more often them me. I will now be checking those trailer brakes every other month.
What I can not figure out, other then the cylinders coming out to far, is how wearing the pads down to nothing causes the calipers to fail. I have warn truck pads down to nothing more then once and even had a disc crack and split in half . The dam thing fell off the truck while going down the rode, but never have I had a caliper go bad on me. I was told that the new units being used are more like car brakes. The pads are clipped in not screwed in and the disc are steel not stainless. If I had the funds I would have gone with the new units but it was going to cost $800 even at cost plus labor. I think the stainless steel units will get the job done. They will just have to get more attention then I have been giving them.