Seems like a far better idea then having no parking brake.
Exactly! There's absolutely no reason why, on long stays (like at our winter place) I can't chock the coach and release the hydraulic brake. But for typical travel stays of a few days to a week that shouldn't be an issue and it sure will be better than the parking brake that Beaver installed. In my Internet searching on the topic I found multiple posts from PT owners who had written "parking brake failed and immobilized vehicle and even one, from an exasperated owner (someone I even know) who wrote "I like this coach but I'm giving it up because I can't deal with this brake problem."
We're planning on getting the system installed on our coach this summer and I'll let people know how it performs. The only people who really will be interested are probably just the couple of 1999-2001 PT owners on here, but at least they will learn something useful.
However, on a related note, one that is appropriate to anyone owning a coach with hydraulic brakes (or air over hydraulic), in the past year I've now replaced six of the brake lines and I caution everyone to examine theirs carefully. The rubber portions of those lines probably have become brittle and the metal could be subject to internal corrosion from water in the brake fluid (even if you have flushed the lines periodically). These lines could be time bombs unless you watch them carefully or replace them.
For example, this week while my coach was in the shop for an unrelated problem, the technician noticed that the brake line entering one of the front calipers had rusted through and fluid was leaking. I was very lucky in that the leak appeared to have just started and the coach still had usable brakes. We had new lines fabricated and installed. The technician subsequently told me that some of the metal "ends" of the lines snapped in his hands as he removed them, they were so brittle from corrosion.
The lines I've replaced have been in the $100-150 (each) range which I didn't consider too bad. I can warn you that removal and replacement of the lines to the front calipers is an awful job and not one that most people will want to attempt on their own. The shop that did the work has a huge lift capable of holding large coaches. They put mine on the lift, raised the fuel tank a few inches, and then used the coach's own front jack to lift the front to enable the wheels to "droop down". The technician then "wriggled his way up and over the fuel tank to retrieve the lines from the frame members through which they ran. If you can visualize this, it was pretty awful. If they didn't have the lift I think they might have had to remove the front axle and the fuel tank.
Anyway, the shop suspects that in the process of installing the Mico system they will find other segments of the brake lines that need replacement. I told them that that was fine with me, since brakes are nice things to have!
