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#1
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King made a version of their KT-76 Transponder with only 150 watts of power
and called it the -78. Im curious if anyone has ever tried to use one of these in a glider. If so, what sort of power draw did you experience? Thanks! -Tony Condon Cherokee II N373Y |
#2
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A standard height encoder alone would need more power draw than a modern
transponder with integrated height encoder. And fitting an ARINC case TPDR into an average glider panel would compromise the layout of thestuff you actually need on the panel to go soaring. At 03:00 30 March 2009, Tony Condon wrote: King made a version of their KT-76 Transponder with only 150 watts of power and called it the -78. Im curious if anyone has ever tried to use one of these in a glider. If so, what sort of power draw did you experience? Thanks! -Tony Condon Cherokee II N373Y |
#3
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On Mar 30, 1:30*am, Peter Purdie wrote:
A standard height encoder alone would need more power draw than a modern transponder with integrated height encoder. And fitting an ARINC case TPDR into an average glider panel would compromise the layout of thestuff you actually need on the panel to go soaring. At 03:00 30 March 2009, Tony Condon wrote: King made a version of their KT-76 Transponder with only 150 watts of power and called it the -78. *Im curious if anyone has ever tried to use one of these in a glider. *If so, what sort of power draw did you experience? Thanks! -Tony Condon Cherokee II N373Y I would also discourage people from wasting time with older transponders for reasons including power consumption, reliability, vendor support and repairability, space, lack of encoder altitude display, etc. Modern transponders are all solid state, the KT-76/78 uses a cavity tube, you know--glowing metal filament, all that stuff, this will use a good fraction of an amp just to run the filament. The power consumption is going to be ugly. However the statement on encoder power consumption is just not accurate. A "standard height encoder" most definitely will *NOT* draw more power than a modern transponder with intergrated height encoder. The "standard" aka most common encoder used in sailplanes is the ACK-30, certainly in the USA it is almost exclusively used. Chosen for it's low power consumption and low cost. Nominal consumption quoted by the manufacturers is is 60mA @ 14VDC. Consumption with the heater off is measured at less than 10mA @ 12 V and from my measurements even on typical soaring days the average consumption is well below the nominal. If the encoder is not exposed to cold air leaks and you don't fly in cold wave etc. then a consumption of a few tens of mA is probably correct for power budget purposes. And what's more the ACK-30 is pretty low cost around $150-$200. A typical modern low power consumption transponder with internal encoder is the Trigg TT-250. The vendor specs for that transponder are a impressive 280mA @14V nominal consumption. That is still over an order of magnitude higher than the ACK-30 encoder alone (the Trigg will be closer to it's claimed nominal power consumption than the ACK-30 encoder which has it's specs padded to account for heater duty cycle). The reason for being pedantic is I don't want people thinking that an external encoder necessarily implies large power consumption. Some may, but most gliders will be using an ACK-30 if the installation has an external encoder. Always be careful of comparing specs. There is no standard way of measuring/quoting typical power consumptions and different vendors may quote different specs. Here are some -- Internal Encoder Trig TT-250 130W (nominal at connector) Mode-S 0.28A typical @ 14V External encoder Mode-S Becker BXP 6401-2-(01) 140W (nominal at connector) 370mA typical @ 50 replies/sec @ 14V Mode-C Becker ATC 4401-1-175 175W (nominal at connector) 700mA max @ 14V, less than 400mA @ 12V typical measured in actual use (i.e pretty much the same as the BXP 6401-2-(01) claimed specs) Mode-C Microair T2000SFL (200W nominal at connector) 150-200mA @ 14V Stand Alone Encoder AKC-30 Encoder, warm up current ~420mA @ 14VDC operating current 60mA @ 14VDC, heater off less than 10mA The Becker ATC 4401-1-175 is probably the most popular transponder in the USA and my personal favorite. It suffers on paper in that it's power consumption quoted is a maximum and well above the typical you will see. For an actively interrogated transponder in real use I'd budget about 400mA plus encoder for the 4401-1-175. For the foreseeable future I have no problem installing a Mode-C transponder in the USA, Europe of course is a different story with Mode-S. I expect Mode-S transponder prices to fall in the USA, driven by European adoption and increasing competition from vendors like Trigg. I'd like to see/play with the Trigg Mode-S. All these transponders are in a useful power consumption range for typical sailplane installations. I personally would not use power consumption as the differentiator to decide between them. But how important that is for you depends on you glider power budget/flight profile etc. (do the math). And as a final reminder, measuring or understanding quoted power consumption can be tricky, as it depends on the SSR interrogation rate and may or may not include the encoder draw since the power for the encoder is typically supplied through the transponder. Some manufactures may quote a total power consumption with their specified encoder. Initial encoder power consumption (i.e. what you will measure if you just turn the unit on) is often dominated by the heater start up current, which will be a lot higher than typical power consumption. Darryl |
#4
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Darryl,
thanks for the constructive reply. My main limitation right now is cash on hand. Theres a chance i could squeek by if i dumped the money to put a new transponder in the glider. I definitely understand the benefit of going with a new solid state device vs. an old transponder. I know this from many hours of flying in cessnas with antique transponders ![]() Im having a hard time justifying going broke to put nearly $2000 into a $5000 glider, when i could possibly get by with a setup for $500, even if i need a bigger battery. Im looking at 4-5 hr flights below 10K feet. I dont need super long duration or super cold weather ability. My main concern is just getting up and away from the gliderport without getting waxed by a KC-135 or the multitude of airliners, business jets, and other airplanes swarming about. At 13:09 30 March 2009, Darryl Ramm wrote: On Mar 30, 1:30=A0am, Peter Purdie wrote: A standard height encoder alone would need more power draw than a modern transponder with integrated height encoder. And fitting an ARINC case TPDR into an average glider panel would compromise the layout of thestuff you actually need on the panel to go soaring. At 03:00 30 March 2009, Tony Condon wrote: King made a version of their KT-76 Transponder with only 150 watts of power and called it the -78. =A0Im curious if anyone has ever tried to use one of these in a glider. =A0If so, what sort of power draw did you experience? Thanks! -Tony Condon Cherokee II N373Y I would also discourage people from wasting time with older transponders for reasons including power consumption, reliability, vendor support and repairability, space, lack of encoder altitude display, etc. Modern transponders are all solid state, the KT-76/78 uses a cavity tube, you know--glowing metal filament, all that stuff, this will use a good fraction of an amp just to run the filament. The power consumption is going to be ugly. However the statement on encoder power consumption is just not accurate. A "standard height encoder" most definitely will *NOT* draw more power than a modern transponder with intergrated height encoder. The "standard" aka most common encoder used in sailplanes is the ACK-30, certainly in the USA it is almost exclusively used. Chosen for it's low power consumption and low cost. Nominal consumption quoted by the manufacturers is is 60mA @ 14VDC. Consumption with the heater off is measured at less than 10mA @ 12 V and from my measurements even on typical soaring days the average consumption is well below the nominal. If the encoder is not exposed to cold air leaks and you don't fly in cold wave etc. then a consumption of a few tens of mA is probably correct for power budget purposes. And what's more the ACK-30 is pretty low cost around $150-$200. A typical modern low power consumption transponder with internal encoder is the Trigg TT-250. The vendor specs for that transponder are a impressive 280mA @14V nominal consumption. That is still over an order of magnitude higher than the ACK-30 encoder alone (the Trigg will be closer to it's claimed nominal power consumption than the ACK-30 encoder which has it's specs padded to account for heater duty cycle). The reason for being pedantic is I don't want people thinking that an external encoder necessarily implies large power consumption. Some may, but most gliders will be using an ACK-30 if the installation has an external encoder. Always be careful of comparing specs. There is no standard way of measuring/quoting typical power consumptions and different vendors may quote different specs. Here are some -- Internal Encoder Trig TT-250 130W (nominal at connector) Mode-S 0.28A typical @ 14V External encoder Mode-S Becker BXP 6401-2-(01) 140W (nominal at connector) 370mA typical @ 50 replies/sec @ 14V Mode-C Becker ATC 4401-1-175 175W (nominal at connector) 700mA max @ 14V, less than 400mA @ 12V typical measured in actual use (i.e pretty much the same as the BXP 6401-2-(01) claimed specs) Mode-C Microair T2000SFL (200W nominal at connector) 150-200mA @ 14V Stand Alone Encoder AKC-30 Encoder, warm up current ~420mA @ 14VDC operating current 60mA @ 14VDC, heater off less than 10mA The Becker ATC 4401-1-175 is probably the most popular transponder in the USA and my personal favorite. It suffers on paper in that it's power consumption quoted is a maximum and well above the typical you will see. For an actively interrogated transponder in real use I'd budget about 400mA plus encoder for the 4401-1-175. For the foreseeable future I have no problem installing a Mode-C transponder in the USA, Europe of course is a different story with Mode-S. I expect Mode-S transponder prices to fall in the USA, driven by European adoption and increasing competition from vendors like Trigg. I'd like to see/play with the Trigg Mode-S. All these transponders are in a useful power consumption range for typical sailplane installations. I personally would not use power consumption as the differentiator to decide between them. But how important that is for you depends on you glider power budget/flight profile etc. (do the math). And as a final reminder, measuring or understanding quoted power consumption can be tricky, as it depends on the SSR interrogation rate and may or may not include the encoder draw since the power for the encoder is typically supplied through the transponder. Some manufactures may quote a total power consumption with their specified encoder. Initial encoder power consumption (i.e. what you will measure if you just turn the unit on) is often dominated by the heater start up current, which will be a lot higher than typical power consumption. Darryl -Tony Condon Cherokee II N373Y |
#5
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Darryl Ramm wrote:
Always be careful of comparing specs. There is no standard way of measuring/quoting typical power consumptions and different vendors may quote different specs. Here are some -- Internal Encoder Trig TT-250 130W (nominal at connector) Mode-S 0.28A typical @ 14V External encoder Mode-S Becker BXP 6401-2-(01) 140W (nominal at connector) 370mA typical @ 50 replies/sec @ 14V Mode-C Becker ATC 4401-1-175 175W (nominal at connector) 700mA max @ 14V, less than 400mA @ 12V typical measured in actual use (i.e pretty much the same as the BXP 6401-2-(01) claimed specs) Mode-C Microair T2000SFL (200W nominal at connector) 150-200mA @ 14V I know the brochure quotes this, but the two installed current measurements I heard of were over 300 ma on the ground, no interrogations. Do other pilots have actual installed measurements for their Microair transponders? -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * "Transponders in Sailplanes" http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * Sections on Mode S, TPAS, ADS-B, Flarm, more * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
#6
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On Mar 29, 8:00*pm, Tony Condon
wrote: King made a version of their KT-76 Transponder with only 150 watts of power and called it the -78. *Im curious if anyone has ever tried to use one of these in a glider. *If so, what sort of power draw did you experience? Tony, one trick to consider is to watch for a used Garmin GTX320. It is a solid-state unit (no cavity tube) with fairly low power draw, and you'll often find them on the used market where someone is swapping out for a GTX327. I got one for $800 a while back and shoehorned it and an ACK encoder into my HP-18 panel. The whole setup cost a bit under $1K. Thanks, Bob K |
#7
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Bob Kuykendall wrote:
ese in a glider. If so, what sort of power draw did you experience? Tony, one trick to consider is to watch for a used Garmin GTX320. It is a solid-state unit (no cavity tube) with fairly low power draw, and you'll often find them on the used market where someone is swapping out for a GTX327. I got one for $800 a while back and shoehorned it and an ACK encoder into my HP-18 panel. The whole setup cost a bit under $1K. What current draw to you measure? The specifications indicate about 1 amp maximum, still a lot compared to the Becker, etc. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * "Transponders in Sailplanes" http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * Sections on Mode S, TPAS, ADS-B, Flarm, more * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
#8
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On Mar 30, 7:06*pm, Eric Greenwell wrote:
What current draw to you measure? The specifications indicate about 1 amp maximum, still a lot compared to the Becker, etc. I don't have good measurements of typical power draw, but it doesn't seem to be anywhere near a full amp. Thanks, Bob K. |
#9
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Bob,
I've got an HP-11A (N9821) and was interested in your post about the GTX 320 and the ACK 30 encoder. Do you have any photos of the installation you can share? Thanks, Mark J |
#10
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I have a GTX320 and an ACK encoder available. The ACK is advertised on glidersource.com, but I didn't list the GTX320. Contact me through that ad, if interested. Please be patient on the reply. I'm going to be down for a couple of days, but I'll get back to you as soon as I can.
C. Czech |
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