Great Dane Champion CP Посібник з технічного обслуговування - Сторінка 5

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electrical system

caution
CONNECTOR WIRING CHANGE
NOTICE TO ALL TRACTOR-TRAILER
OWNERS AND USERS
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 121,
Air Brake Systems, was amended by the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration of DOT to
require that truck tractors manufactured on or
after March 1, 1997, provide constant power for
a trailer's antilock brake system (ABS). Some
manufacturers provided this feature before the
effective date.
These tractors using a single 7-way electrical
connector will have constant power for ABS
on the center pin when the key switch is on.
Tractor-trailer owners and users who presently
use the center pin for auxiliary power to equip-
ment other than trailer ABS (for example, dome
lights, backing lights, bottom dumps, sliding
undercarriages, air ride dump valves, etc.) will
be affected by this change.
In certain uses of this constantly powered
center pin connector, unexpected or unintended
activation of this equipment may be hazardous
or result in personal injury.
BEFORE connecting your trailer to a tractor,
MAKE SURE that the constantly powered center
pin WILL NOT UNINTENTIONALLY TURN ON
TRAILER EQUIPMENT. If you have any questions
about your present wiring, or how to rewire your
vehicles, you should contact the tractor
manufacturer, auxiliary equipment manufacturer,
and/or Great Dane Trailers Customer Service
Department.
WIRING DIAGRAM
FRONT
— TOP VIEW OF TRAILER —
7 COND MAIN HARNESS
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The electrical system on every Great Dane trailer meets
or exceeds all federal and state requirements in effect
at the time of manufacture. Wherever required by law,
lamps and reflectors are marked by the manufacturer to
indicate the appropriate specification with which each
complies.
For optimum performance and long life from the trailer's
lamps and wiring, follow this inspection procedure.
Clean all reflective tape or devices and lamps. See that
all lamps burn properly. Replace all burned-out lamps
and broken or missing reflective devices. Factory-
approved replacement parts should be used, and
replacement bulbs or lamps of equal candlepower
should be used for safety.
warning
TRAILER IS EQUIPPED WITH ANTILOCK BRAKE SYSTEM (ABS).
NO. 7 (BLUE) CIRCUIT IS RESERVED FOR CONTINUOUS POWER
SUPPLY TO ABS. FOR MOST EFFECTIVE ABS OPERATION,
TOWING VEHICLE MUST SUPPLY MINIMUM OF 10 AMPS AT
12.5 VOLTS TO NO. 4 (RED) & NO. 7 (BLUE) CIRCUITS.
PIN COLOR
CIRCUIT
1
WHITE
GROUND RETURN TO TOWING VEHICLE
2
BLACK
CLEARANCE, SIDE MARKER & ID LAMPS
3
YELLOW LEFT TURN SIGNAL & HAZARD LAMPS
4
RED
STOP LAMPS & ABS POWER
5
GREEN
RIGHT TURN SIGNAL & HAZARD LAMPS
6
BROWN
TAIL, LICENSE, CLEARANCE &
SIDE MARKER LAMPS
7
BLUE
ABS CONTINUOUS SHARED POWER
FAILURE TO HEED
J560
THIS WARNING CAN RESULT
SOCKET
IN PROPERTY DAMAGE,
SERIOUS INJURY OR DEATH.
NOTE: Electrical circuits may be protected by circuit
breakers located inside the front nose box.
REAR
GREEN
BROWN
BROWN
WHITE
GREEN
BROWN
WHITE
RED
BROWN
4 COND ABS HARNESS
WHITE
BLUE
WHITE
WHITE-GREEN
RED
BROWN
RED
BROWN
WHITE
YELLOW
BROWN
WHITE
YELLOW
WHITE
BROWN
WHITE-GREEN
WHITE
BROWN
A warning decal, as shown on the previous page, is
located on the front of each trailer. You may trace
individual electrical circuits by the wire colors indicated.
Refer to the schematic drawing and the decal for
conductor numbers and wire colors.
warning
Do not exceed 21 candlepower bulbs for dome
lamps. Stronger bulbs may generate excessive
heat and start a cargo fire. Cargo must be kept
away from dome lamps. Dome lamps must be
turned off for over-the-road operation.
Use only a 12-volt DC battery for checking lamps or
antilock brake systems. Never use battery chargers or
transformers.

brake maintenance

DISC BRAKE SCHEDULED MAINTENANCE
Several different brands of disc brakes are available
in the marketplace. Because procedures differ brand
to brand, refer to the maintenance and adjustment
information from the manufacturer of the specific
brake in question.
DRUM BRAKE SCHEDULED MAINTENANCE
Establish a preventive maintenance schedule for
the periodic adjustment, cleaning, inspection, and
lubrication of brake equipment on the basis of past
experience and expected severity of operations. Take
into account that linings and drums are particularly
subject to wear and should not be allowed to wear
to the point where rivets or bolts may contact brake
drums. To compensate for this, schedule brake
inspections as frequently as required to maintain
satisfactory operation and maximum safety (not to
exceed 25,000 miles). Accepted maintenance practices
require that bearings should be adjusted properly
before making brake adjustments; that adjustments
provide uniform lining clearance, correct travel of levers,
and proper equalization; and that brakes should be
cleaned, inspected, lubricated, and adjusted each time
the hubs are removed.
MAINTENANCE DURING MAJOR OVERHAUL
OF BRAKES
During a major overhaul, check the following parts and
replace them with original equipment parts or equal, as
required:
1. Spiders – for looseness or sheared fasteners.
2. Anchor pins – for wear or misalignment.
3. Brake shoes – for wear at anchor pin holes.
4. Cam shafts and cam shaft bearings or bushings –
for wear.
5. Shoe-return springs – replace during overhaul and
when you replace lining. Do not reuse springs.
Inspect all wiring to see that it is not damaged, and
that it is properly supported and protected, with all
connections tight. Frayed or damaged wiring should be
replaced with stranded cable of equal size or larger, and
should never be replaced with a smaller cable, or with a
solid conductor. All holes where wiring passes through
must contain rubber grommets.
NOTICE:
Most trailers are equipped with a sealed
wiring harness. Check the circuits at the plugs only
– do not cut or probe test for shorts. Every time
the harness is unplugged, repack connector with
Grafo 112X grease or equivalent.
Never replace fuses or breakers with metal foil or other
devices.
6. Brake linings – for oil or grease saturation, wear,
loose rivets or bolts.
7. Drums – for cracks, scoring, other damage.
Install all new lock rings where they are used.
During a major overhaul, before reassembling parts that
have been inspected, lightly coat cam shaft bushings
and cam roller follower shafts and journals with brake
lubricant.
warning
Brake liners contaminated with lubricant cannot
be salvaged or cleaned. They must be replaced.
For all fittings on cam shafts, meter-type fittings that
have a maximum of 40 psi pressure relief or shutoff are
recommended.
BRAKE LUBRICANTS
A high-temperature waterproof grease in a number 1
NLGI grade to lubricate the brake actuating system is
recommended. It should be smooth textured, corrosion
resistant, and free of fillers and abrasives. It should
maintain a satisfactory softness under normal parking
and storage temperatures so the brakes can be applied
and released.
The following greases meet these recommendations:
Texaco Thermotex EP #1 Shell Darina #1
Marathon 528 HD
Sunaplex #1 EP
Amdex #1 EP
Philube B #1
Trailers operating in extremely cold weather
(below -40˚ F) may require a grease conforming to
MIL-G-25013C.
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