Electric Brakes, know how to set them,
Gentlemen, I can also share that I have the ability empathize with a number of you on this thread... yep, I too have been one of those guys on the side of the road with not one, but two blown tires at the same point of break down... a couple of years ago, I had a 16' with a 2' dove tail trailer built to haul my 5000 lb 62 thunderbird... 14600 gvwr, dry weight about 2400 lbs... electric brakes on both axles... my trailer was over built... but, no matter how strong, or tough your trailer might be, there will always be, "the weakest link". and that link was the tires... the firm that built it, put cheapo 6ply tires on it... dummy here, took off loaded for a 180 mile trip to car show... Oklahoma, it can get hot... 97 degree day, the concrete was probably an easy 125... speed, approx. 70 mph... tires were maybe a year old... 80 psi when cold was what the rubber checked out when she was loaded... the front left tire blew up and shredded to nothing, the right rear trailer tire, rolled off of it's bead and destroyed... so, after much contemplation, as to what caused this breakdown, 1st, the 6 ply tires, cheap tires, 2nd, heat, not only the ambient temp and temp of the concrete roadway, but I finally realized that one factor added into failure, my electric brakes... heat transfer from the brakes and wheel hub was going straight to the tire, thus adding to their destruction... the 62 Bird was parked and evenly placed directly over the two axles, keeping added weight off the tongue and trucks rear axle and suspension... So, in short to summarize, I now pull that trailer with nothing less than a 10 ply tire... Temperature, be aware of it... get a heapo cheapo lazer thermostat to check your hub and wheel temps... don't set your trailer brakes with too much positive... and in finality, when airing up your tires, if it calls for 80 psi, fill it up to 75psi, that heat from the concrete and brakes will build tire pressure over 95 total psi..... oh, one thing I forgot, the monetary hit for this screw up, one new wheel, 4 new 10 ply tires out in the middle of nowhere, a roll back to haul car on trailer about 40 miles, 6 hours of inconvenience, VISA, getting a $600 hit... my humility tested... my girl friend didn't get roses for over a week... I hope my tail of misfortune will help some of you to be aware. especially the monetary hit on the wallet...the only fortunate thing that happened, after all of the destruction caused from the blow out, the 62 Bird, came out of the ordeal unscathed...