Boaters, I took my 20 ft Four Winns to the gas station (along with a a few diamonds to barter) and noticed a clunking sound. I had a friend drive it slowly as I walked along side. The sound was coming from the left side and did not seem to match the tire rotation but that was hard to tell.
I jacked up the trailer. It's a tandem axle so I had to support the frame in front and behind the axils as I did that. (Safety first). The real wheel with no brakes spun freely with no binding. The front wheel was draging quite a bit.
I may have caused that by cranking on the Bleed Access port too much and preloading the brakes. I cracked open the bleed port on the cylinder to release a little fluid and the wheel spum freely. Then I drove the trailer slowly again and the clunk was gone. I was glad I did not have a bad bearing.
What do you think? Does this make sense? Would too much pressure in the brake line cause a "clunk". I do believe that the brakes are "Self adjusting" and the ratchet will tighten them again and as the shoes wear.
I jacked up the trailer. It's a tandem axle so I had to support the frame in front and behind the axils as I did that. (Safety first). The real wheel with no brakes spun freely with no binding. The front wheel was draging quite a bit.
I may have caused that by cranking on the Bleed Access port too much and preloading the brakes. I cracked open the bleed port on the cylinder to release a little fluid and the wheel spum freely. Then I drove the trailer slowly again and the clunk was gone. I was glad I did not have a bad bearing.
What do you think? Does this make sense? Would too much pressure in the brake line cause a "clunk". I do believe that the brakes are "Self adjusting" and the ratchet will tighten them again and as the shoes wear.