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Hydraulic
to Electric Brake Conversion
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From this:

To this:

Electric brakes have been on travel trailers since the 1940's. For
some reason in the mid 1950's to early 1960's, hydraulically actuated
brakes where offered as an option on Airstreams and other trailers
of the era as a "safety feature". We now spend our time
and money converting these maintenance monsters. Here's how I did
ours.
Update 8/1/06. After the unexpected axle break on
the Caravel, I've decided that even after all this work, I am going
to replace the
entire axle with an Axis axle (see
restoration section).
Even though the axle
looks sound, the forgings used 50 years ago have weakened to the
point they can break at any time, and while going down the road
at 60MPH
is not the time for it to happen, let alone what it will do to your
travel plans. Plus, the extra 2 1/2" lift I got from the new axle
put the trailer at a height more common with today's tow vehicles
compared to 1950's automobiles.
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Click
Images below to expand to full size
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The Stromberg Slave Brake Controller. I cleaned it up and will leave
it as a conversation piece, The male coupler hooked into the front and
was connected to the tow-vehicle brake lines. When the brake pedal was
depressed, it extended a plunger that compressed a cylinder in the unit,
actuating pistons in the trailer brakes.
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The original split-rim wheels and 1970's era 7.00x15 tires. Enlarge
and check out the cracks. They did make the 70 mile trip home though.
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The Hydraulic brake axle, including the wheels, was all manufactured
by HADCO Engineering of Los Angeles, CA
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On to the conversion. I first had to clear my "lady friends"
from the area (Black Widow spiders). The wheel comes off exposing the
old hub and spindle dust cap.
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The hub comes off by removing the spindle nut under the dust cap, Here
is the old Stromberg brake assy with the hydraulic piston.
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The backing plate comes off with the 5 bolts. The old brake line can
be seen, as well as the 30 year old shocks.
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A lot of work needs to be done to the axle assy now. I sandblasted
the whole thing and painted it, and installed new Monroe 33033 shocks.
The "W" shaped thing at the bottom is an axle skid for for
flat tire events.
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It is very important to lube the links, removing them if necessary
to get them to take grease. Lube them every chance you get for awhile
to insure grease gets all through the shackle pin mating surfaces, and
then once a year thereafter.
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The modified backing plates reinstalled.
Click here to see the conversion process. Modern loaded backing
plates can't be used, as the HADCO hub is a different diameter and shape
than conventional hubs. This is a left-hand brake - you can tell by
the magnet arm on your LEFT. This is very important.
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The hub gets an armature plate bolted into the inside using existing
holes. The brake magnet rides against this. When the brakes are energized,
the drag actuates the linkage, spreading apart the brake shoes against
the outer diameter of the hub. You can see the new 3M inner grease seal,
replacing the original felt seals.
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The bearings repacked with grease. Champion Tire has a good website
article on packing
bearings. The hub and the dust cap go back on.
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A backside view of the hub with the brake wires to the left. The brake
adjusting slot is lower center. Rubber covered 2 conductor wire follows
the patch of the old brake line inside the belly skin up to the harness
splice point aft of the A-frame tongue.
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The finished product with the new Dexter rim and matching Moon hubcap,
looking very much like the original. Kind of too bad I ended
up throwing the whole thing away, huh! I kept this section in case
someone else could use the information.
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All 15 inch tires are not the same! These are both 15" Dexter
rims. On the right is a Goodyear Workhorse 7.00x15 bias ply tire.
On
the left is an H78-15 bias ply tire. A 225/70-R15 radial falls somewhere
in between. I am using the tire on the left as my spare, as it takes
less room in the under-bed storage compartment.
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