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Best Tow Bar & Brake System?


HSVBamaBob

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Good Morning All,

Well, we have gone and done it! We are going to 'retire' the 5th wheel and move on up to a Motorhome in preparation for fulltiming in 2017.

Wanted to tap your brains on what you consider to be the best Tow Bar and Brake system. There is a thread in this forum that indicated Blue Ox was the best Tow Bar and the Air Force One Proportional brake was the best brake. Of course that thread ended in 2012, and I suspect that technology has advanced markedly in 3 years.

Our new Motorhome will be a Berkshire XLT, towing a Jeep Cherokee Trailhawk. Since the Berkie has a 15K towing capacity I wonder if the expense of a proportional braking system is necessary?

Finally, the overarching criteria for the towing system is quick, foolproof connection/disconnection to the Toad. The Trailhawk comes standard with frame mounted tow hooks, so I imagine hookup to a tow bar will be pretty straightforward.

TIA for your advice and recommendations!

Bob & Anne-Marie Williams

| 2017 Berkshire XLT 43A with Ultrasteer Tag | Blue Ox Avail + KarGard II |
| SMI AF-1 Air Brake | 2016 Jeep Cherokee Overland TOAD | Pedego bikes |

| Nights Camped: 2013 - 242014 - 422015 - 56Jul 2016 - Fulltime |

 

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We have a DP and use the SMI air force one. No issues

Ron & Linda

Class of 2007
2000 Monaco Diplomat

2005 Honda Element

"Do what you can, with what you have, where you are" Theodore Roosevelt

"We can't control the wind, but we can adjust our sail"

"When man gave up his freedom to roam the earth, he gave up his soul for a conditioned ego that is bound by time and the fear of losing its attachments."

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The most popular tow bars seem to be Blue Ox and Roadmaster. I had the Blue OX and friends had the Roadmaster.

The Blue Ox worked great for 75,000 miles the Roadmaster system also worked well for my friends.

I had the Buddybrake and it worked well. It took maybe 5 minutes to set in place, connect to the brake pedal and plug into the DC accessory plug.

Clay(WA5NMR), Lee(Wife), Katie & Kelli (cats)
Full timed for eleven years in our 2004 Winnebago Sightseer 35N Workhorse chassis. Snowbirds for 1 year. Now settled down in western CO.
Honda Accord toad.

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It doesn't matter what the tow capacity of your motorhome, the car in tow needs some kind of braking system to stop the car in the event of a break-away situation.

 

At that moment, the car is no longer attached to the motorhome.

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I've had Roadmaster.....didn't like the stuff hanging on the front. I've had Blue Ox, was just fine, easy to connect & disconnect. When disconnected very little iron is left exposed. Used a Brake Buddy for many many years, worked OK, but was kind of a PITA to put in, take out and store. I now use a Ready Brute, with Blue Ox base plate on my Jeep. This tow bar has a built in surge brake/break away system. Easy on, easy off, just like the Blue Ox, and nothing to store. Easy to install, and a good SMALL company to work with.

 

Oh the Ready Brute is now called the Ready Brake Elite. The factory does the same "rebuild" service that Blue Ox provides.

Dave W. KE5GOH

Stuck in the 70's ---

In E. Texas

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We just went through this exercise, 5th to MH and Toad braking systems.

 

Here is the thread:

 

http://www.rvnetwork.com/index.php?showtopic=116540&hl=swharton#entry760208

 

Our primary goal was we did not want anything tht had to be put in/taken out of the toad each time we wanted to use it. We ended up with the Ready Brake Elite and love it..........We have used it for 2 months and it has been flawless except for our mistakes.

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We've been very pleased with the performance of our ReadyBrute Elite combined tow bar and auxiliary brake system. The tow bar is rated at 8,000 lbs, and is an all terrain hook up. The brake system hook up only requires snapping a clip on an eyelet. I do recommend installing the optional break-away kit as well. The manufacturer, NSA, can equip the ReadyBrute arms to connect with any of the popular base plates.

Dutch
2001 GBM Landau 34' Class A
F-53 Chassis, Triton V10, TST TPMS
2011 Toyota RAV4 4WD/Remco pump
ReadyBrute Elite tow bar/brake system

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This is our first, and last MH. We use a Roadmaster tow bar, and a M & G braking system

for the Jeep, including the brake-away system. We have the classic Falcon tow bar, and if I had it to do over, I would have bought the all-terrain model tow bar. The M & G air-powered braking system is great, it's an install and forget type system. The Jeep braking is proportional to the MH braking force.

FWIW, installation of the M & G system is not difficult, just time-consuming; the instructions booklet is excellent.

 

2000 Winnebago Ultimate Freedom USQ40JD, ISC 8.3 Cummins 350, Spartan MM Chassis. USA IN 1SG retired;Good Sam Life member,FMCA ." And so, my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you--ask what you can do for your country.  John F. Kennedy 20 Jan 1961

 

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This is our first motor home, and we have used this equipment for three years:

  • Blue Ox Aladdin Tow Bar
  • US Gear Unified Tow Brake

 

Blue OX is well known... and the US Gear Unified Tow Brake is absolutely fantastic for breaking while towing, and for hookup and unhooking easily & quickly.

Jim.

2007 Dolphin

  • Safe-T-Plus Steering Bar

Our Blog: Click Here

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We just went through this exercise, 5th to MH and Toad braking systems.

 

Here is the thread:

 

http://www.rvnetwork.com/index.php?showtopic=116540&hl=swharton#entry760208

 

Our primary goal was we did not want anything tht had to be put in/taken out of the toad each time we wanted to use it. We ended up with the Ready Brake Elite and love it..........We have used it for 2 months and it has been flawless except for our mistakes.

Thanks for the link to the thread!

 

TBH, I also posted this question to another Forum we are on and I was really surprised. I figured the Blue Ox-Air Force One would be the most frequently reported setup.

 

I was wrong.

 

The Ready Brake Elite with a Blue Ox baseplate beat every other setup by almost 4-1.

 

I'm still intrigued by the Air Force One (mainly because it works off the air brakes) but NSA does make a point that sometimes mechanical is better than hi tech ;)

Bob & Anne-Marie Williams

| 2017 Berkshire XLT 43A with Ultrasteer Tag | Blue Ox Avail + KarGard II |
| SMI AF-1 Air Brake | 2016 Jeep Cherokee Overland TOAD | Pedego bikes |

| Nights Camped: 2013 - 242014 - 422015 - 56Jul 2016 - Fulltime |

 

event.png



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We have owned and used two different Blue Ox tow-bar systems and had great success. We also used the Blue Ox base-plate on three different towed vehicles and particularly like the way it looks when everything is removed from the front of the tow vehicle. We also used two different models of Brake Buddy with excellent service. I liked the portability of it and ease of moving between vehicles.

 

It is very difficult to tell you which is best since most of us have only used one or perhaps two different products and so do not have any basis to compare them. Since our tow vehicles were all light in weight I never saw the need for braking except in a hard stop, which the BB type of units supply.

Good travelin !...............Kirk

Full-time 11+ years...... Now seasonal travelers.
Kirk & Pam's Great RV Adventure

            images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQqFswi_bvvojaMvanTWAI

 

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One other thing to keep in mind as you shop. The definition of what is "best" is a very subjective thing. In the mind of nearly anyone, best means the system that the individual has used and been most satisfied with. But very few of us have actually used more than one or perhaps two different systems. My suggestion is that you look at what is available and the costs of the different systems, then find what seems to suit your needs and see if it has a solid following to indicate that it is reliable and long lived and if it is, go with it. Most owners of any RV equipment choose one and if they are satisfied they never change and just stay with the one that they are used to and trust. Just because I (or anyone else) happens to believe that my system is the best, does not mean that you would agree.

 

As an example is the long time argument between proponents of RV systems with progressive braking and those with one that only applies in a hard stop. But systems work just fine and serve very well if used in the way that they were designed, yet most owners of one will tell you that the other just isn't good. Which is the best car, Ford of Chevy? This issue is very little different.

Good travelin !...............Kirk

Full-time 11+ years...... Now seasonal travelers.
Kirk & Pam's Great RV Adventure

            images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQqFswi_bvvojaMvanTWAI

 

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We have a Blue Ox Avail towbar. I live 20 min from Roadmaster's HQ but they do not make a stock base plate for my 2015 AEV JK350 Jeep. On the other hand Blue Ox had exactly what I needed. As for a braking system, I went with the Intellibrake system. Both have worked very well for close to 12,000 hilly Northwest and Central California miles over the last year.

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  • 3 weeks later...

This is our first motor home, and we have used this equipment for three years:

 

  • Blue Ox Aladdin Tow Bar
  • US Gear Unified Tow Brake

Blue OX is well known... and the US Gear Unified Tow Brake is absolutely fantastic for breaking while towing, and for hookup and unhooking easily & quickly.

Jim.

This is the same set up we use and it works very well. I like the fingertip control for adjusting the sensitivity of the braking for the toad as well as the manual lever to brake the toad separately if needed.

<p>....JIM and LINDA......2001 American Eagle 40 '.towing a GMC Sierra 1500 4X4 with RZR in the rear. 1999 JEEP Cherokee that we tow as well.

IT IS A CONTENTED MAN WHO CAN APPRECIATE THE SCENERY ALONG A DETOUR.

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Blue Ox and RViBrake system. Like them both.

X2 Initially was going ReadyBrake but it was not compatible with our Jeep Patriot (nor was any other braking system that involves penetrating the firewall due to lines and hoses). Got the RViBrake2 and couldn't be more pleased with the way it works and the outstanding customer support.

Berkshire XL 40QL

Camphosting and touring


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