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Trailer Brake controller

13K views 12 replies 6 participants last post by  ryankenn 
#1 ·
Has anybody installed a trailer brake controller and if so what did you use?
 
#2 ·
Installed REDARC Tow-Pro Elite trailer brake controller

As you may already know, the Discovery Sport is pre-wired for 7-pin, braked trailer electrics. This feature is unlocked with the OEM trailer electrics and a trailer brake controller. The maximum towing capacity realized with an OEM hitch.
I installed the OEM hitch several months ago (see other posts) and installed a trailer brake controller the other day. I wanted to show you the install of that brake controller.
Firstly, I located the trailer-brake socket under the dash, just behind the OBD socket.

This happens to be the same connector that Ford and Land Rover use on other models (although eTrailer has thus-far failed to include the DS in their harness specs). I used a Curt model C51322 vehicle-specific adapter from eTrailer.

There’s not a lot of room for an under-dash brake controller, so I bought an Australian-made RedArc Tow-Pro Elite brake controller with a remotely-controlled head unit from eTrailer. Model # EBRH-ACCV2. This came with its own wiring harness. I cut the ‘Curt’ connector off of my Curt wiring harness and spliced on the RedArc harness using butt connectors and wrapping in some cable shielding from Oreiley’s.


I want the knob easily accessible and visible, with a clean, integrated look. I don’t want that knob dangling around like an amateurish dongle. So I started poking around and consulting documents I saved from a prior Topix subscription. I decided pretty quick that the dash was off-limits. So I looked at some clean real-estate by the gear-shift knob. I did some research and found you just simply “pull” the whole console cover off. Start pulling near the storage box under the arm rest and work your way towards the front of the vehicle, detaching the two wiring harnesses once all the clips are disengaged.

I found the area just back and left of the emergency brake was best-suited for the remote head as far as depth, accessibility, and ease of fitment are concerned.

Also, there was a cavity under the cubby behind the shift knob that I was able to screw the main unit to a stationary plastic brace. In order to get access and get the wiring harness under there, I took the two bolts out of the panel on the side of the floor console and just popped it off, which gave me good sight and access to that cavity.


I had to remove the shift mechanism and hack a little bit of the emergency brake bracket off for proper fitment.
Measured, transferred measurements, crossed fingers, and drilled hole. But, should have measured thrice. **** it!! Was just a few millimeters too-far back. The head unit didn’t clear the cup holder box.


For damage control, I flipped over the little gray head unit bezel and moved it towards the front of the vehicle enough to cover the previous hole and clear the cup holder box. Traced it with a pencil. Used a small grinding stone with my Dremel to make the new piece of the new circle and it mounted fine.

To be safe, I pulled the cup holder box and ground off the high points with that grinding stone to ensure clearance.

Also, the plastic was a little too thick so I ground it a little thinner to give plenty of clearance once the knob was attached.

For God’s sake, put the hole HERE:

Everything went together nicely and the wires tucked away just fine. I got a cheap 7-pin tester and all the functions give the correct signal:
Left-turn, Right-Turn, Running Light, 12V power, Reverse light, Rear-fog light.
All set to get the old lady that pontoon boat she’s been buggin me about!

Hope that all helps de-mystify the whole DiscoSport trailer brake thing.
NOTE::: The RedArc cable that connects the head unit to the main unit is an RJ45 cable with a 90-degree bend in one end. The bend didn’t work for me so I used another RJ45 cable we had laying around (as per RedArc instructions). Came with our old router I think.
NOTE::: There is an extra pin in the trailer brake socket coming from the vehicle that the trailer brake controller doesn’t use. I don’t know what this is, but it doesn’t seem to hinder function. Please enlighten me if you know what that’s all about. I haven’t investigated further.

Cheers!
 
#3 ·
NOTE::: There is an extra pin in the trailer brake socket coming from the vehicle that the trailer brake controller doesn’t use. I don’t know what this is, but it doesn’t seem to hinder function. Please enlighten me if you know what that’s all about. I haven’t investigated further.

Cheers!
That's a feed from your running lights, so a brake controller can have an illuminated dial that comes on with the car's lights.

Nice install by the way, although I don't think I would have been brave enough to attack the plastic trim as aggressively as you did!
 
#5 ·
Found the brake controller plug socket under the dash. Connected a Tekonsha brake controller (Prodigy P2) using the Tekonsha Ford brake control harness (3035-P) which plugged right into the vehicle's brake controller plug/socket. Pretty straightforward job once you find the brake controller plug socket under the dash. Have also got the factory OEM harness for the 7 pin electrics which is simple plug and play into the connector located inside the boot floor (above the spare wheel).
 
#7 ·
I believe the part you're looking for is VPLCT0183 (TowBar Electrics NAS, 5-door). I did a big post where I installed the towbar and the electrics myself, you should look it up! I did have my car programmed for it, but I honestly don't know what all it unlocked. I think it'll run you one hour of labor, but they owed me a favor during a routine service and programmed it on the house. I imagine it unlocked the stuff having to do with that sticker that goes on your trailer that your car can track when you're backing up, but I haven't used. Hope that helps!!
 
#9 ·
No Sweat! I didnt' tow anything before I got it programmed, but I know the four-flat and the 7-way lights worked because I have a tester that tests the signal for both, but as far as the back-up assist and anti-sway features that are programmed in the ECU, I'm not sure. But the lights themselves and the 12V hot on the 7-way did work right after install.
 
#11 ·
I am not aware of an OEM brake controller from LR. Look at the plug under the dash and at the wiring options for brake controllers for sale and see if you can find one that fits with minimal alteration. Etrailer has good phone customer support. My father has a GMC that has an integrated brake controller, but no such luck with this Disco Sport. I just noticed all my pictures are gone from that post I made several years ago. The photo hosting company must have kicked them out! Does that help at all?
 
#12 ·
Well I installed the Curt 51120 Controller using the 51322 Cable and it doesn't like it. It has a bunch of issues so I assume the 51322 is wired wrong for my 2016 despite the indications it should work. It has the red dot on all the time, which the manual states means the red wire is connected to the wrong side of the stoplight switch or the wrong switch all together. With the output set to minimum, with no trailer if I step on the brake the display shows 0.0 and I don't think it should. If I put an output adjustment in it at all I will very briefly see 0.5 or even 1.0 as it ramps then it says OL which is Overload on the blue wire, or a short. Considering the 7 pin is the factory piece plugged into the factory harness at the back, and the plug under the dash is OE for a trailer I hope its the cable from the controller to the vehicle.

I am going to start by unplugging the 7 pin harness altogether at the back and see if it persists.

Does the vehicle always show the picture of a trailer when you hit the brakes? I tested a 4 pin trailer before the controller was installed and every time you hit the brakes the green trailer icon comes up while the brake is depressed.

All the lights work great. Hoping its something easy. I was hoping for plug and play but the Landrover always has different ideas.
 
#13 ·
Well good job Curt. Problem was pretty obvious. Someone pinned out either the adapter end or controller end in reverse. I just trimmed the locating tab off and it slides in backwards which fixes the wiring. Of course the reverse wiring popped the 30A Low Profile Jcase fuse and those aren't as easy to just stroll down and get. Plug and play wasn't all it was cracked up to be.

 
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