ABS, Stability Control, and Trailer Systems
Anti-lock brakes, stability control, fifth wheel coupling, glad hands, and trailer connections.
- Explain ABS operation, components, and malfunction indicators
- Describe electronic stability control systems for trucks
- Identify fifth wheel components and proper coupling procedures
- Explain glad hand connections and trailer electrical systems
Leçon 1
ABS Operation and Components
How ABS Works
The Anti-lock Braking System (ABS) prevents wheel lockup during hard braking by modulating brake pressure to individual wheels. When a wheel begins to lock, the ABS ECU detects the rapid deceleration through a wheel speed sensor and commands the modulator valve to reduce air pressure to that brake chamber. Once the wheel regains traction, pressure is re-applied.
ABS components include wheel speed sensors (tone ring and pickup), the ABS ECU (controller), and modulator valves (solenoid-controlled air valves). The ABS warning light illuminates at startup for a bulb check and should turn off within a few seconds. If it remains on, the system has a fault.
ABS Malfunction
When ABS fails, the vehicle still has normal brakes - it just loses the anti-lock function. The ABS warning light stays on, and the driver must use careful brake application to avoid lockup.
ABS prevents wheel lockup by modulating brake pressure when a wheel begins to skid. The system uses wheel speed sensors, an ECU, and modulator valves. When ABS fails, normal braking still works - only the anti-lock feature is lost.