patooyee
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I have two trailers and know virtually nothing about maintenance of trailer brakes. I suspect both need a little TLC in the brake department though. My bigger trailer has 10k oil bath axles and one of the seals went bad so I took it apart the other day thinking I would just get the part number off the existing seal, run down to Napa and grab a new one. WRONG! Everything on these axles are big truck parts and it is all strictly mail order unless you have a big truck parts store near you. The seal I need is a 10-56 unitized seal and is crazier than any seal I have ever seen before. So lesson #1 learned is to plan ahead!
Part of planning ahead requires knowing what's inside the axles before you tear them down. Or at least being prepared to tear down and park it until you can get parts there. The easiest way to do this is to find your factory service manual. After a ton of searching here is mine:
http://www.al-ko.us/download/ALKO_8kto16k_OwnerManuals.pdf
My understanding is that Al-Ko was one of the largest trailer axle manufacturers, if not the second largest, before they were bought by Dexter, which is the largest. I am told that many Dexter and Al-Ko parts interchange. How much truth there is behind that I don't know or care.
I have the 10k heavy duty drum brake version. Having never looked inside an electric drum brake I figured it would have been crazy-complex. But its actually not. There's just an electro-magnet that sticks to a plate called the armature plate that is bolted to the inside face of the drum when it is powered up. That magnet is attached to a lever / arm that goes from the bottom of the drum to the top. It has a slipper block attached to the top which pushes the brake shoes outward as the lever moves. The movement is achieved by the magnet getting drawn along the armature plate as the drum spins. Pretty simple once you see it all.
The magnet does appear to have some wear material on it that, in my case I suspect may be worn since it has obviously been slipping a lot as a result of all the oil inside of there. I'm wondering how one tells when the magnet needs to be replaced? Anyone know?
If anyone has any other trailer brake tech to add tot his feel free. The purpose of this thread is to learn about a component that I don't think anyone ever really pays attention to. I haven't seen any threads about it at least ...
Part of planning ahead requires knowing what's inside the axles before you tear them down. Or at least being prepared to tear down and park it until you can get parts there. The easiest way to do this is to find your factory service manual. After a ton of searching here is mine:
http://www.al-ko.us/download/ALKO_8kto16k_OwnerManuals.pdf
My understanding is that Al-Ko was one of the largest trailer axle manufacturers, if not the second largest, before they were bought by Dexter, which is the largest. I am told that many Dexter and Al-Ko parts interchange. How much truth there is behind that I don't know or care.
I have the 10k heavy duty drum brake version. Having never looked inside an electric drum brake I figured it would have been crazy-complex. But its actually not. There's just an electro-magnet that sticks to a plate called the armature plate that is bolted to the inside face of the drum when it is powered up. That magnet is attached to a lever / arm that goes from the bottom of the drum to the top. It has a slipper block attached to the top which pushes the brake shoes outward as the lever moves. The movement is achieved by the magnet getting drawn along the armature plate as the drum spins. Pretty simple once you see it all.
The magnet does appear to have some wear material on it that, in my case I suspect may be worn since it has obviously been slipping a lot as a result of all the oil inside of there. I'm wondering how one tells when the magnet needs to be replaced? Anyone know?
If anyone has any other trailer brake tech to add tot his feel free. The purpose of this thread is to learn about a component that I don't think anyone ever really pays attention to. I haven't seen any threads about it at least ...