HELP every time we pull the caravan with our car peoguot 508 the car smells of burning rubber/oil, temp gages all ok not overheating, and it's only when we are pulling the caravan, we have tried twice to go away but dare'nt take the risk. TIA
Are you sure it is the car, it makes me think it might be the caravan, have you released the handbrake fully on the caravan, also when was it last serviced as it could be the brakes binding or stuck on, does it have a motormover? Have you released it, just a thought as if it is the car you would expect it to do it solo as well, or it might be the clutch going on the car. What is the loaded weight of the caravan.
Hi thanks for that but yes to all of those questions, car in the garage at the moment trying to locate the problem, but I do think it is the clutch, it's when it's under a bit of pressure I think, but garage said not!!! Many rhanks
without knowing what caravan you actually have, i would say its highly likely that you havent loaded the caravan correctly and have put too much weight on the front of it/ in the boot, consequently the tyres on the car will be rubbing, however one would think there would be a noise that went along with that too.
so it would be helpful if you could give the exact details regarding your car/caravan such as make model and year of both
The easy way to check if the clutch is defective is to put the handbrake on, put the car into gear then slowly release the clutch. If the engine happens to stall then it proves that the clutch is fully operational. If the clutch is defective then the engine will run without any resistance from the clutch. That's how a qualified mechanic would check it which is how they arrived at their decision saying the clutch is satisfactory.
I would be inclined into thinking it was the caravan at fault causing the burning smell which the most obvious place to inspect is where friction is involved and that could possibly be the brakes binding in the wheel hub. My advice would be to have just a chassis service done (not including the habitation service) and see if there is any evidence of rubbing or any worn parts that need replacing.
That's quite a vague complaint to diagnose remotely! And no specific details of either van or car (petrol/diesel, manual/auto etc.) - multiple potential sources, and we could be here a while ticking off all the options one by one!
All of the above suggestions are pretty valid.
But let's have a go at narrowing down potential sources
1) Have you ever previously towed with set up without the smell problem and this is a new recent problem, or is this a new to you set up always with this problem?
2) Is this smell noticeable in the car when driving, or only when you step out of the car after travelling?
3) *Do you inflate BOTH car and caravan tyres to recommended (PUBLISHED in user manuals as opposed to other 'advice'!) pressures, it's usual to inflate car tyres to the higher 'fully loaded' pressure when towing.
4) *Have you weighed the noseweight of the caravan to ensure you are not overloading the car tow bar/rear axle? When hitched up, does the caravan have a SLIGHT nose down attitude, and the car remain relatively level with only SLIGHT tail down stance?
5) *Have you weighed the caravan (or weighed and totalled content weights) to ensure you haven't overloaded it beyond it's MTPLM. Potential for caravan wheels to be rubbing if suspension too overloaded.
6) *Are you sure the tyres fitted to caravan are the correct size/load rating (caravan tyres are normally HD commercial vehicle rated ones, NOT ordinary car tyres although the dia and width can be the same).
* Underinflated/overloaded tyres will run quite hot and the 'rubber' smell can then be quite noticeable. They would likely be uncomfortably hot to the touch and have a brownish surface colouration if getting too hot.
7) Is the car using (burning) engine oil, or giving very poor fuel consumption figures? Indicative of smell coming from exhaust pipe.
8) Is any oil leaking from engine/gearbox and getting on exhaust, or blowing from crankcase ventilation system (normally not vented to atmosphere, but sucked back into engine air inlet)?
9) Bit of an outsider, but is all the tow bar/caravan wiring OK, or is any of it overheating?
10) Does the breakaway cable have sufficient slack so that it is NOT applying caravan brakes during normal towing (tightish turns especially).
11) Do you have a ATC stability system fitted to your van, and does the system do it's auto check routine OK and finish with a solid green light on the indicator? I have seen them fail and lock brakes on!
12) Caravan handbrakes are not unknown to fail to release fully/correctly and bind during travel, are the caravan wheels excessively hot after towing? Is the caravan free moving when manoeuvring by hand?
13) Are the motor mover (if fitted) rollers completely clear of tyres at all times?
14) Is the caravan chassis/suspension all in good order, not unheard of for chassis/axle to be damaged and misalignment causing rubbing/scrubbing of tyres.
Common practice unless tyres have remote temperature sensing via any TPMS, to wander round outfit and check all tyre/wheel temps are comfortable to the touch whenever you stop on a journey, easy check for underinflated tyres/binding brakes, and can prevent problems on the road at inconvenient time/places.
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