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Convert M105, M200 or other air over hydraulic brake trailer to electric how-to

Chief_919

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I had a lot of folks asking for details on my conversion on my 105 at the GA rally, and while it is not done yet I have it hooked up and working. I am starting this now and will update as I go with what I change. I will put links to anything I use to make it easy to find, and am going to write it so all the folks new to MV's who may find this from a search will be able to follow.

First some basics- your M105, M200 or similar trailers are air over hydraulic systems, meaning air activates a master cylinder. In recent years commercial trailer makers have started making electric/hydraulic setups more common and now actuators are out there that can be adapted.

From my research it looked like two models of actuator were the best candidates- the Dexter K7-650-00 or the BrakeRite 4822500. I went with the Dexter because all other things looked the same but the Dexter is in an all aluminum case that looks much stronger.

IMG_8218.jpg


This thing has a MASSIVE brake fluid reservoir 24oz of fluid i got and paid a fortune for at the local parts store didn't even come close to filling it- best to get a big 32oz or bigger jug of DOT-5 silicone brake fluid. Make sure you sue DOT-5, that is what your trailer had with it from the military. If you switch you will need to really do a good job flushing it.

It is easy enough to hook up- there are 4 wires- 12v hot that provides constant power, control from the brake actuator, 12v from the breakaway kit, and ground. These will be wired into your civilian wiring harness, either a 7 pole or 6 pole. I used a 6 because the local Northern Tool was out of 7, but 7 is more common. I will probably switch at a later date to one of these really nice cables with the junction box.


Your master cylinder on your trailer is really simple- one brake line comes out facing the rear of the trailer:

IMG_8219.jpg

Take that line loose and attach it to the actuator- on my M105 I required a 7/16-3/6 adapter, I used an Edelmann 258430 fitting and it worked perfectly. I have not checked fitting sizes on M200's or other trailers, so check before you buy. On my Dexter actuator it looked like I could remove the fitting and thread a bigger one or maybe direct into the housing, but whatever sealant they used at the factory was so strong it held so tight the fitting started to bed before it would come loose, so I quit trying that and went out and found the adapter at O'Rielly.

IMG_8222.jpg

While I had the actuator plumbed and wired, while it was still sitting on an ammo can under the trailer, I bled the brakes. Since the actuator is equipped for a breakaway switch that turns it on via a small battery I simply connected the breakaway wire to the 12v lead- when you do the actuator starts pumping and keeps doing so until power is removed. This is to lock the brakes up if your hitch fails, but it makes it super easy to bleed the brakes- just apply power to that wire and open the bleeder valves, started with the farthest from the actuator (in length of the lines). Open it until fluid runs constant with no air or sputtering, close it, move to the next farthest away. I would only run the actuator no more than about 2 minutes without stopping to let it cool just to be safe, but I didn't feel any heat when I did mine. Easiest brake bleeding job ever.

Since I wasn't sure this was even going to work, and was also rushed to be ready to go to the GA Rally, I didn't mount it permanently yet, it is ratchet strapped to the frame with a pad between it and the frame. Permanent mount to follow soon now that I have proven it works, but still have some fine tuning to do.

IMG_8226.jpg

Next post- test drive and kinks to be worked out.
 

Chief_919

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Western NC
My first test drive was slow, and I pushed the manual brake switch over and felt- nothing!

Getting a little speed up, I could feel it come one when I stepped on the brakes- it came on smooth with about a half second delay from when I hit the brakes.

Coming back and reading the manual it seems the issue is that I am using a proportional brake controller, and it only applies higher voltage when the inertia switch in it senses the actual vehicle stopping motion, so just doing the switch on the controller is not enough.

So far I am about 70% satisfied. I think it should have a little more braking action, I plan to bleed it again, adjust the brakes on the trailer and also go through and check all my wiring on the truck- especially the ground that is way too small for the higher load of the actuator but was plenty for electric brakes that had a much smaller load.
 

Chief_919

Well-known member
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Location
Western NC
Great post! Any reason you went electric rather than surge?
Ease of conversion more than anything. Other than the bracket I will have to make to hold the actuator its all a bolt on affair. Going surge would have been about the same cost after an actuator, steel to mount it, brake lines and the rest but would have taken a lot more fab work to replace the pintle with a surge one.

And I do like that this keeps the look the same.
 

flyfishtrailer

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Cool, CA
reviving an old thread....has anyone followed suit with this and wan to share their experiences and how they set theirs's up?
 

flyfishtrailer

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Location
Cool, CA
Thank you Chief_919...write up was spot on and your links helped me purchase the correct parts the first time around. I completed the conversion on my M103A3 (MKT trailer) in just a few hours of work which included removing the air system, building a bracket for the electric actuator, installing the break away battery and wiring, and wiring it all in to my 7 pin plug. And your right, using the breakaway hot side made this the easiest brake bleed ever (and a one person job!). Thanks
 

BlueOvalF22

New member
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Location
South Texas
So it looks like a 7/16-24 to 3/8 x24 adapter.

716 to 3/6 was a typo.


EDELMANN 258430 Adapter-Standard To Dual Master Cylinder - 1/4" Tube - 7/16-24 Female Inverted Flare Seat x 3/8-24 Male Inverted Flare Info
Category: Pipe Fitting Connector
 

patracy

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Staff member
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Location
Buchanan, GA
My first test drive was slow, and I pushed the manual brake switch over and felt- nothing!

Getting a little speed up, I could feel it come one when I stepped on the brakes- it came on smooth with about a half second delay from when I hit the brakes.

Coming back and reading the manual it seems the issue is that I am using a proportional brake controller, and it only applies higher voltage when the inertia switch in it senses the actual vehicle stopping motion, so just doing the switch on the controller is not enough.

So far I am about 70% satisfied. I think it should have a little more braking action, I plan to bleed it again, adjust the brakes on the trailer and also go through and check all my wiring on the truck- especially the ground that is way too small for the higher load of the actuator but was plenty for electric brakes that had a much smaller load.
Did you ever do anything else with it? I've got a spare 105 trailer here that I'm thinking I'll turn into a welding trailer for my CUCV. I was thinking about swapping in electric brake backing plates. But I would think this route would be easier. Wonder if there's a hydraulic valve that could be used to make a hybrid setup.
 

Kevingc

New member
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Location
Doyle, CA
Here is the conversion I did. This is a Hydra Star actuator. It can't use Dot 5 so I flushed the system from the master cylinder hose out to the wheel cylinders with mineral spirits then used Dot 3. The old Dot 5 was ugly so I flushed until clear, then some more. I used an air bleeder. All said and done it was about $950.

Found out during flushing that I had a bad wheel cylinder. Went to a brake supply shop and got new cups for $2.00. As long as the wheel cylinder is in good shape, just clean it up good, run a hone through it and its fixed. It was actually good this happened as I was able to inspect the brakes and make sure everything was good. The shoes were like new. Made me confident that everything was in working order. Draw back is getting the socket for the bearing nut. I found one on ebay for $25 and well worth it. It's like 3 3/8" or so and an 8 point socket. The wheel bearing grease did need changing though. I suggest that if you can, tear the wheels down and inspect everything.

This system works great. Be sure to understand and adjust the brake controller. About sent me through the windshield it worked so great.

Good Luck to All
 

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