Dleopoldi914
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- Jun 19, 2021
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Sorry if questions seem kind of basic. I haven't work a whole lot with cars or with tools in my past but know preventative maintenance is important.
I own a Parker 21se 2021 and it came with a load rite trailer. The trailer is going on 3 years and sitting in my driveway at my house so I am starting to go through the trailer and check various things. I only tow the boat at max 3 times a year to and from my house and about 2-3 miles to the ramp.
Below are the things I have done.
1.) I went through all the lug nuts on the tires and torqued to 90lb psi.
2.) I've looked at all the tires and made sure at 50 psi.
3.) Trailer has EZ-Lube hubs so I saw that you can just hit the fitting and wait for the all of the old grease to come out. I used yamalube marine grease which was a different color than the red grease in there, so was easy for me to see when I hit the new grease.
I am now looking over the brakes, I notice my reserve looks a little low. See pic below.
Also this bladder should it sit inside the cap? In what direction I would assume its just a liner correct (see below)?
Below are how one of my brake look and you can kind of see the top layer flaking. Feels like it has decent amount of thickness. What I am hearing though is its common in salt water environment for brakes to degrade before they wear. Just from visual inspection do you think they are degraded? Do you suggest I just change all the pads?
I looked on the load rite website and these seem like the replacement brakes. Numbers and text match up on pads in pics to below pic.
https://www.loadrite.com/trailer-pa...lipers-brake-components/brake-pad-set-knottⓒ/
I would also assume that to take the calipers off and replace I would undo the cap over the hex bolt on the back of the wheel and then take out the screw? Pic of the two capped hex bolts below.
My game plan was to replace all the pads, then drain all the fluid using a vacuum pump with a very long tube. Then I am going to fill the reservoir at the actuator, I have a the long tube so can pump the brake pump I have and keep pumping until I see no more bubbles. I will start at the farthest away brake caliper with the bleeding and work my way to the closest.
I watched videos where they said the trailer needs to be jacked all the way down to the floor so as to let the bubbles escape when I bleed. After I am done bleeding do I put the trailer level then top off the reservoir?
What do you think?
Brakes right now work as is I tested them yesterday with jacking trailer up and spinning the wheel and using a screw driver on the actuator and the wheel stopped. Since I only 2 times a year should I just leave it alone? or should I be proactive?
Also maybe I can just fill the reservoir and bleed the fluid?
I own a Parker 21se 2021 and it came with a load rite trailer. The trailer is going on 3 years and sitting in my driveway at my house so I am starting to go through the trailer and check various things. I only tow the boat at max 3 times a year to and from my house and about 2-3 miles to the ramp.
Below are the things I have done.
1.) I went through all the lug nuts on the tires and torqued to 90lb psi.
2.) I've looked at all the tires and made sure at 50 psi.
3.) Trailer has EZ-Lube hubs so I saw that you can just hit the fitting and wait for the all of the old grease to come out. I used yamalube marine grease which was a different color than the red grease in there, so was easy for me to see when I hit the new grease.
I am now looking over the brakes, I notice my reserve looks a little low. See pic below.
Also this bladder should it sit inside the cap? In what direction I would assume its just a liner correct (see below)?
Below are how one of my brake look and you can kind of see the top layer flaking. Feels like it has decent amount of thickness. What I am hearing though is its common in salt water environment for brakes to degrade before they wear. Just from visual inspection do you think they are degraded? Do you suggest I just change all the pads?
I looked on the load rite website and these seem like the replacement brakes. Numbers and text match up on pads in pics to below pic.
https://www.loadrite.com/trailer-pa...lipers-brake-components/brake-pad-set-knottⓒ/
I would also assume that to take the calipers off and replace I would undo the cap over the hex bolt on the back of the wheel and then take out the screw? Pic of the two capped hex bolts below.
My game plan was to replace all the pads, then drain all the fluid using a vacuum pump with a very long tube. Then I am going to fill the reservoir at the actuator, I have a the long tube so can pump the brake pump I have and keep pumping until I see no more bubbles. I will start at the farthest away brake caliper with the bleeding and work my way to the closest.
I watched videos where they said the trailer needs to be jacked all the way down to the floor so as to let the bubbles escape when I bleed. After I am done bleeding do I put the trailer level then top off the reservoir?
What do you think?
Brakes right now work as is I tested them yesterday with jacking trailer up and spinning the wheel and using a screw driver on the actuator and the wheel stopped. Since I only 2 times a year should I just leave it alone? or should I be proactive?
Also maybe I can just fill the reservoir and bleed the fluid?