BoondockingAirstream Posted Tuesday at 09:29 PM Posted Tuesday at 09:29 PM Purchased the 2019 Oliver Elite II February 2022 from Original Owner. It was clean and had not been used very much. Much like on the Oliver lot when new. We got the plates, insurance paper work filed and paid and connected the Oliver to the 2016 F350 4x4 Diesel. We also have a 2019 27FBQ Airstream International. The Oliver was for a Boondocking alternative travel trailer. NO BRAKES. Plug into F350, pull away and 'Brakes Disconnected'. The Brake System of the F350 works perfectly with the 2019 Airstream. Not on the Oliver, apparently. I was told by Oliver it is possible the 2016 F350 may not be compatible. I am going to try one of our under the dash units, used on two other Airstreams we owned over the last 19 years. The heavy F350 handles the Oliver easily, but having Trailer Brakes... is necessary. Also to sell, as well. I removed the Truma Hot water system. It was not operational, as well. I was notified about a Recall in the US MAIL,,, but since I removed the totally mutilated Truma... "sorry no can help". It had the uncrimped propane heating unit that is on the recall.. Previous owner gave me Service Tickets trying to have it fixed. Did not work then either, Reading other posts about Trailer Brakes Not Working... our wiring looks nothing like any of those. No information in the Oliver Service Guide. Oliver is careful not to get into giving advice and then have things go wrong, which I understand. We were also told our 2016 F350 trailer electronics, may be too OLD for the Oliver. It works perfectly with the 2019 Airstream. Hmmm. It appears that the wiring on Olivers change often, Ours is different under the table and beds than other photographs seen on the Forum. I photographed the possible areas. Did check all of the wiring into the Buss Bar. All snug and look good. Everything else works that is electrical. Any suggestions?
Moderators Mike and Carol Posted Tuesday at 11:26 PM Moderators Posted Tuesday at 11:26 PM Hey Ray, I had an issue with my brakes intermittently disconnecting. There is a set of brake wires that go through the rear axle that had worn to the point where bare wire was contacting the metal axle. Several other owners have had the same issue. The wires were pulled out and replaced and are now zip tied to the outside of the axle. Problem solved. It’s a bit unusual that your trailer is not high mileage for this to be the cause but it is worth checking. I’ll see if I can dig up some of the old posts on this issue. Mike 2 Texas Hill Country | 2016 Elite II #135 | 2020 Ram 2500 6.7L
Moderators Mike and Carol Posted Tuesday at 11:32 PM Moderators Posted Tuesday at 11:32 PM (edited) Here’s a thread addressing this issue with pictures. If this is your problem it’s pretty straightforward to fix. Good luck. Mike Brake Disconnect Thread Edited Tuesday at 11:33 PM by Mike and Carol 1 1 Texas Hill Country | 2016 Elite II #135 | 2020 Ram 2500 6.7L
BoondockingAirstream Posted yesterday at 12:46 AM Author Posted yesterday at 12:46 AM Mike & Carol... thanks for the posts. I will look for the Brake Disconnect Thread and try to move my information over to the Brake Disconnect Thread. I tried to go back and add the following... but could not until it was reviewed. "I jacked each side up, spun the wheels and pulled the Break Away Switch and both sides LOCKED UP IMMEDIATELY and immovable. Plugged the BAS back in and they spun perfectly." I did try Oliver Inc. for some advice, but because of them having some issues if they gave me advice and something went wrong... they had to withhold any assistance. I understand. This seems to be a change as I believe Oliver Inc. has helped with some suggestions on the Forum. The first owner obviously had this issue before me. I have a mechanical brain and electricity is not my choice of repairs. I could not find my Ohms meter for working on antique Wurlitzer Jukeboxes years ago and could not find it... in the garage. With a F350 Diesel 4x4 braking is still important, but this heavy tow vehicle manages. I want it to operate properly. No schematics. Nothing in the service manual to help. It seems like everything electronic changes often... and if the problem is not found, while parking in the lot, when purchased... brakes are often missed from what I have read and once hundreds of miles away... might have noticed. But thought it was a simple issue...?? 1
Steph and Dud B Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago You definitely need the brakes working. You're not legal without them. I have read somewhere about some trucks having a problem with some trailers. Found this online: "Ford vehicles, particularly certain F-150 and Super Duty models, have experienced issues with their factory-installed trailer brake controllers. These problems can range from the trailer brakes not engaging at all, to intermittent connection problems, or even the trailer brakes applying unexpectedly and forcefully. A common cause is a software glitch within the integrated trailer brake control module, which can prevent the controller from correctly detecting a trailer or properly applying the brakes. " See if you can borrow someone else's truck to see if the problem persists. Another likely failure point is the 7 way plug on the trailer. Those contacts can become spread out and/or corroded. Look inside the plug and inspect the brake contacts with a flashlight. If they're corroded, a temporary fix can be using a thin file, emory board, or screwdriver blade to scrape the contacts clean. If they seem spread out, use a small screw driver or hook to bend them back inward a bit. These would be temporary fixes. If your plug is shot, it's easy to replace. Disconnect the trailer batteries before you start because the 12v Power lead is hot and then follow this wiring diagram to install a new plug. 1 Stephanie and Dudley from CT. 2022 LE2, Hull #1150: Eggcelsior. Tow vehicle: 2016 GMC Sierra 6.0 gas dually 4x4. Our Oliver journey: Steph and Dud B's RV Screed Where we've been RVing since 1999:
BoondockingAirstream Posted 15 hours ago Author Posted 15 hours ago (edited) I will soon discover what the 'real problem' is with my 2019 Oliver Elite II electrical brake system. A Mobile RV/TT service van is coming to the Oliver's current home on August 7th. They use a 'Test Box that Plugs into the RV Plug' and tracks what and where the problem may be located: Some say it is my vintage 2016 F350 Diesel 4x4 trailer beast that stretched the Oliver to an Elite III length. Some say it is the current owner. Some say I have my wires crossed and shorted within my skull. I say it is the Oliver since being built in 2019. Neanderthals are not tested for a pulse, but I can ask. Also: Rating my towing ability. Common sense approach to mechanical things, but less when electricity is involved. The previous owner would not return my call, after purchase, about his experiences with the Oliver's electric braking system. Several messages. Polite, but to the point. Still waiting after four years. I will ask if I can take photographs during the process. If so, I will post them and the results. Towed three, purchased new Airstreams, since 2006 and no electric brake issues. Towed my current 2019 Airstream since new, NO electric brake issues. Owned the 2019 Oliver Elite II used, since February 2022, WITH brake issues on the inaugural first day of ownership. I use the term Inaugural: "implying a more formal official ceremonial and transfer of my wealth to a stranger". Edited 15 hours ago by BoondockingAirstream
CRM Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago Since your brakes work when you pulled your disconnect I'm guessing it's likely a simple connection issue on the blue wire or ground. Less likely the ground wire if your running lights/turn signals and brake lights are working. 1 2010 Elite II Hull #45, the first LE2 sold. 2020 Toyota Tundra TRD Off Road 4WD 5.7 with 38 gallon tank, 4.30 axle and tow package.
jd1923 Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago 54 minutes ago, CRM said: Since your brakes work when you pulled your disconnect I'm guessing it's likely a simple connection issue on the blue wire or ground. Less likely the ground wire if your running lights/turn signals and brake lights are working. Or the Ford issue that @Steph and Dud B cited. First thing to try is to test for voltage at the Ford F350 TV 7-blade connecter. Jump the BLUE and WHITE wires with a test light or meter while a friend applies the brake pedal then releases, on and off. @BoondockingAirstream you don't need another trailer. If it shows voltage, then test for amperage through the blue when connected. I believe @Geronimo John wrote that brakes at each wheel should draw 2-4A, so at the main harness it should show 4x this number when all 4 brakes are working. If you have 12VDC at the hitch and no amperage draw downstream to the trailer, then you have an open circuit along the path to the wheels. No brakes at all likely means your issue is not wiring at individual wheels or in the axles. It would be between the TT 7-blade connector and where it's connected to the first wheel in line. 1 Chris & John in Prescott, AZ | 2016 EII #113 | '01 Ram 2500 Cummins!
Steph and Dud B Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 4 hours ago, CRM said: Less likely the ground wire The brakes are grounded to the trailer frame, not through the truck connector. This is so they will still work via the breakaway switch without the truck. That makes the blue wire from the truck the likely suspect, since the breakaway does still activate the brakes. My money is still on the connector itself. Stephanie and Dudley from CT. 2022 LE2, Hull #1150: Eggcelsior. Tow vehicle: 2016 GMC Sierra 6.0 gas dually 4x4. Our Oliver journey: Steph and Dud B's RV Screed Where we've been RVing since 1999:
CRM Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago 21 minutes ago, Steph and Dud B said: The brakes are grounded to the trailer frame, not through the truck connector. That trailer ground works for the breakaway switch since the battery in the trailer powers it, but to complete the brake circuit from the truck you must have a good ground from the truck to the trailer too 1 2010 Elite II Hull #45, the first LE2 sold. 2020 Toyota Tundra TRD Off Road 4WD 5.7 with 38 gallon tank, 4.30 axle and tow package.
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