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Derek beat me to the punch. I had a similar problem on my Komet. The
tongue was only partially collapsed; ie. it remained in one position which was about halfway between fully extended and fully compressed. Granted, it had been bent/damaged in an accident by the prior owner. Solution was to pump a lot of grease under fairly high pressure into the fittings (watch as it oozes out of various gaps and holes, then pump some more). Then, we got some of the more (ahem) "substantial" members of the club to provide resistance while we alternately pushed and pulled on the hitch using a car. It sprang free on one forward pull and worked fine after that. We also did some adjusting on the star nuts to get the friction point right on the brakes. We eventually replaced the entire tongue assembly with a new OEM part, and after that it was obvious that the range of motion (throw) of the braking mechanism was actually still slightly restricted on the old part. P3 Derek Copeland wrote: There are various possibilities: 1) The brake drums may have become rusted onto the shoes. This can happen to any vehicle when you leave the handbrake on for a long period. NB. It is better to leave the handbrake off, if you can secure the trailer in some other way. 2) The linkages may be seized 3) The tow hitch may have seized on (less likely) Try spraying all the linkages with penetrating oil and greasing the tow hitch mechanism and then waiting for a while. If this doesn't work try rocking the trailer backwards and forwards with either a lot of people or a powerful towing vehicle. If that doesn't work, jack the trailer up and remove the wheels. Tap the brake drums reasonably firmly with a copper or aluminium faced hammer to free the brake shoes. If that doesn't work, place a long bar across the wheel studs and hit that in alternate directions with a hammer. Good luck! Derek Copeland At 12:00 17 January 2007, Mike Lindsay wrote: The overrun brake on our Comet trailer is jammed in the 'brakes- on' position, and has defied all attempts to free it. I understand there are nylon components inside the trailer tongue, so we don't want to try the time honoured option of heating it with a blow lamp. Does anyone have any suggestions? -- Mike Lindsay |
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