To add to this, I used a "toad-charge" unit on my C-Maxes, and now a Hopkins Battery maintainer on my Maverick. It takes the +12 volt line from the 6-pin tow cable and fees it through the unit that has a 5A fuse AND a diode in it to prevent power from being taken from the Maverick back out to the motorhome.Not really complicated. Two of us here have thousands and thousands of miles flat towing Ford Hybrid vehicles. Both of us agree that you should mash the throttle pedal to at least get the ICE engine to run momentarily. Shift the shifter into reverse, drive, reverse, drive than back to park. Should take a minute or a bit longer ( just like Ford recommends). Then put it back into neutral tow and head on down the road.
What we both also agree on, and learned early on, is that your 12v battery WILL go dead on a longer trip. Be it that you plug in a brake system that runs off 12v or just that the Maverick uses a bit of power while in neutral tow.....your 12v battery will sooner or later be dead. Just a small jump pack will usually start it right up. But there is a way that you can fix the problem so you never deal with it again. Install a 12v charging wire from the coach to the Maverick jump post under the hood. Don't need to run an additional ground wire, just tap into the 7 pin round battery charging wire circuit. Done
While it is generally always referred to as a "charge wire", it is NOT simply a wire running from the motorhome to the towed.
The Toad-charge was nicer and had a circuit breaker instead of a fuse, but the manufacturer died and they are now pretty much unavailable. The Hopkins worked fine on my 2622 mile, 2-1/2 week trip.
https://www.amazon.com/Hopkins-39332-BrakeBuddy-Vehicle-Maintainer/dp/B004RCXB8A/ Here is the older Toad-charge...if you can find one. You don't need the cable if you connect the two items to the charge wire from the 6-pin.
Sponsored