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I am now able to reproduce my charging problem.
Engine off, Bat and Alt on: Bus voltage: 24.8 Supply to Voltage Regulator: 22.6 Voltage Regulator Output to Alt Field: 21.6 I'm thinking maybe I should rig a jumper from Bus to the Voltage regulator to see if the problem has to do with that 2.2v drop through the "Alt/Reg" 5A circuit breaker, the Alt side of the master switch, and the Overvoltage relay. Any comments from you electrical gurus out there? Can anyone tell me WHERE the overvoltage relay is mounted in my Cessna 210M (1978)? Thanks! John Clonts Temple, Texas N7NZ |
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Most of the 24 volt Cessna's have the over voltage relay built into
the regulator. The over voltage protection has two stages. The first stage turns off the field pass transistor. If the voltage still goes higher the second stage turns on a crowbar SCR that blows an internal 5A fuse in the regulator. From what you describe the alternator has field voltage (21.6) so it should be generating current. With power off the field should measure 15-25 ohms. Your brushes may be worn out. I had a problem a few years back where new brushes would not last 50 hours. I finally found that all of the replacement brush springs were too stiff. There is two ways to fix this. Get the springs out of a "OLD" junkyard alternator or cut a 1/4 inch off of the new stiffer springs. I have no idea why the spring stiffness changed but it is noticeable and measurable. John On Thu, 08 Jul 2004 03:53:23 GMT, "John Clonts" wrote: I am now able to reproduce my charging problem. Engine off, Bat and Alt on: Bus voltage: 24.8 Supply to Voltage Regulator: 22.6 Voltage Regulator Output to Alt Field: 21.6 I'm thinking maybe I should rig a jumper from Bus to the Voltage regulator to see if the problem has to do with that 2.2v drop through the "Alt/Reg" 5A circuit breaker, the Alt side of the master switch, and the Overvoltage relay. Any comments from you electrical gurus out there? Can anyone tell me WHERE the overvoltage relay is mounted in my Cessna 210M (1978)? Thanks! John Clonts Temple, Texas N7NZ |
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On Thu, 08 Jul 2004 03:53:23 GMT, "John Clonts"
wrote: I am now able to reproduce my charging problem. Engine off, Bat and Alt on: Bus voltage: 24.8 Supply to Voltage Regulator: 22.6 Voltage Regulator Output to Alt Field: 21.6 I'm thinking maybe I should rig a jumper from Bus to the Voltage regulator to see if the problem has to do with that 2.2v drop through the "Alt/Reg" 5A circuit breaker, the Alt side of the master switch, and the Overvoltage relay. John, I didn't see your original charging problem, so cannot comment on that, but will make a few general comments on this post. 21.6 Volts seems like a high field voltage to drive the alternator. What kind of load was on the system during this measurement? I'm not certain, but believe wih minimal load, the field voltage on my 14V system was around 6-7V. The 2.2V drop between the master bus and VR is not good and can lead to several problems in the electrical system. I would fix this before doing anything else. #1. The bus voltage will be high. The VR will crank up the field voltage until its input 'sees' 24V. Given a constant drop of 2.2V between bus and VR, the bus will be at 26.2. #2. If the resistance causing the 2.2V drop is caused by a bad CB, switch, or loose/corroded connection before the OVR, the resistance will vary depending on temperature and turbulence knocking the system around. This will cause OVR cutouts as the OVR will occasionally see the full bus voltage which is 24V + the voltage drop from a second ago (26.2V or higher). #3. Resistance between the master bus and the VR input sets up an RC circuit which (when extreme) can cause charging system oscillation. I like your idea of trying to eliminate the drop between the bus and the VR input by direct connecting it to the bus. (Make sure to have your avionics master OFF when doing this kind of troubleshooting!). Another approach would be to measure the voltage after each of the field CB, field switch, OVR, and VR input. This will probably tell you where the drop is, and you can do this without the plane running. BE EXTRA CAREFUL when probing around under the panel, it is easy to short things with voltmeter probes. -Nathan |
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(John) wrote in message ...
Most of the 24 volt Cessna's have the over voltage relay built into the regulator. The over voltage protection has two stages. The first stage turns off the field pass transistor. If the voltage still goes higher the second stage turns on a crowbar SCR that blows an internal 5A fuse in the regulator. I think mine is separate, per my comparison with the docs at www.zeftronics.com. ("Type B" system using R25101 or R25102, not sure which yet). BUT I have not been able to find the OVR yet ![]() the panel somewhere, but in that rats nest I can't find it. Can anyone tell me which side? or high/low? Mounted or just hanging? There are a few barrel-like connectors hanging around in there that look about the same size is what I imagine the OVR to be. From what you describe the alternator has field voltage (21.6) so it should be generating current. With power off the field should measure 15-25 ohms. Your brushes may be worn out. The field resistance was 18 ohms. I didn't try moving the prop to see if it varied though-- I'll try that. I had a problem a few years back where new brushes would not last 50 hours. I finally found that all of the replacement brush springs were too stiff. There is two ways to fix this. Get the springs out of a "OLD" junkyard alternator or cut a 1/4 inch off of the new stiffer springs. I have no idea why the spring stiffness changed but it is noticeable and measurable. Wow. We DID replace our alternator just last August at annual time, and it has about 50-75 hours on it since then... Thanks for your input! Cheers, John Clonts Temple, Texas N7NZ |
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Nathan Young wrote in message . ..
On Thu, 08 Jul 2004 03:53:23 GMT, "John Clonts" wrote: I am now able to reproduce my charging problem. Engine off, Bat and Alt on: Bus voltage: 24.8 Supply to Voltage Regulator: 22.6 Voltage Regulator Output to Alt Field: 21.6 I'm thinking maybe I should rig a jumper from Bus to the Voltage regulator to see if the problem has to do with that 2.2v drop through the "Alt/Reg" 5A circuit breaker, the Alt side of the master switch, and the Overvoltage relay. John, I didn't see your original charging problem, so cannot comment on that, but will make a few general comments on this post. 21.6 Volts seems like a high field voltage to drive the alternator. What kind of load was on the system during this measurement? I'm not certain, but believe wih minimal load, the field voltage on my 14V system was around 6-7V. This was with the engine off and no load to speak of. Maybe I will try monitoring it as I add load, and see what it does. The documents at www.zeftronics.com suggested that the VR field output of "0.5-2.0v less than the VR input" was acceptable (22.6 - 21.6 = 1.0v) The 2.2V drop between the master bus and VR is not good and can lead to several problems in the electrical system. I would fix this before doing anything else. #1. The bus voltage will be high. The VR will crank up the field voltage until its input 'sees' 24V. Given a constant drop of 2.2V between bus and VR, the bus will be at 26.2. Per your logic I think I would be seeing 30.2 instead of nominal 28.0 when the engine is running? I will check that. #2. If the resistance causing the 2.2V drop is caused by a bad CB, switch, or loose/corroded connection before the OVR, the resistance will vary depending on temperature and turbulence knocking the system around. This will cause OVR cutouts as the OVR will occasionally see the full bus voltage which is 24V + the voltage drop from a second ago (26.2V or higher). #3. Resistance between the master bus and the VR input sets up an RC circuit which (when extreme) can cause charging system oscillation. I have noticed the ammeter bouncing slightly at about 4 per second (when in the VR "control region") ever since we have owned the plane. Maybe that was not acceptable? I like your idea of trying to eliminate the drop between the bus and the VR input by direct connecting it to the bus. (Make sure to have your avionics master OFF when doing this kind of troubleshooting!). Thanks, I thought of it myself but have since read of it elsewhere ![]() Another approach would be to measure the voltage after each of the field CB, field switch, OVR, and VR input. This will probably tell you where the drop is, and you can do this without the plane running. Yeah but aren't those buggers hard to get to? At least I have never attempted it. BE EXTRA CAREFUL when probing around under the panel, it is easy to short things with voltmeter probes. Ok, thanks for all the info! Cheers, John Clonts Temple, Texas N7NZ |
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On 8 Jul 2004 12:06:26 -0700, (John Clonts) wrote:
Nathan Young wrote in message . .. On Thu, 08 Jul 2004 03:53:23 GMT, "John Clonts" wrote: I am now able to reproduce my charging problem. Engine off, Bat and Alt on: Bus voltage: 24.8 Supply to Voltage Regulator: 22.6 Voltage Regulator Output to Alt Field: 21.6 I'm thinking maybe I should rig a jumper from Bus to the Voltage regulator to see if the problem has to do with that 2.2v drop through the "Alt/Reg" 5A circuit breaker, the Alt side of the master switch, and the Overvoltage relay. John, I didn't see your original charging problem, so cannot comment on that, but will make a few general comments on this post. 21.6 Volts seems like a high field voltage to drive the alternator. What kind of load was on the system during this measurement? I'm not certain, but believe wih minimal load, the field voltage on my 14V system was around 6-7V. This was with the engine off and no load to speak of. Maybe I will try monitoring it as I add load, and see what it does. The documents at www.zeftronics.com suggested that the VR field output of "0.5-2.0v less than the VR input" was acceptable (22.6 - 21.6 = 1.0v) The 2.2V drop between the master bus and VR is not good and can lead to several problems in the electrical system. I would fix this before doing anything else. #1. The bus voltage will be high. The VR will crank up the field voltage until its input 'sees' 24V. Given a constant drop of 2.2V between bus and VR, the bus will be at 26.2. Per your logic I think I would be seeing 30.2 instead of nominal 28.0 when the engine is running? I will check that. Crap. My bad John, 30.2 is correct. I was thinking nominal voltage of 24, not 28. Based upon this... I suspect the 210 has 2 problems. #1. You probably have a bad alternator. As long as the pulley isn't slipping, I believe 21V field voltage would be sufficient to drive 28V output. #2. You still need to resolve the 2.2V drop between the bus and the VR input. The aforementioned RC behavior could definitely cause the pulsating ammeter you've seen. Also another cause for pulsating ammeter is a faulty field master switch. The contacts heat up, expand, break contact, cool down, make contact and start the cycle over again. -Nathan |
#8
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"John Clonts" writes:
I am now able to reproduce my charging problem. Engine off, Bat and Alt on: Bus voltage: 24.8 Supply to Voltage Regulator: 22.6 Voltage Regulator Output to Alt Field: 21.6 I'm thinking maybe I should rig a jumper from Bus to the Voltage regulator to see if the problem has to do with that 2.2v drop through the "Alt/Reg" 5A circuit breaker, the Alt side of the master switch, and the Overvoltage relay. Any comments from you electrical gurus out there? Those readings sounds almost OK to me.... a) I'm assuming the bottom end of the field is grounded. b) With the engine NOT running, the voltage regulator keeps thinking "More power, Scotty" and raises the field voltage as far as it can. The 1 v. drop across the VR sounds fine to me. c) The 2v drop from the bus to the VR-in is bothersome. You can find such 2 or 3 ways. [Or rather, if it was legal for you to...] 1) Using a DVM, put one probe on the bus, and the other on the VR input. Set to 2v fullscale. Still see a drop that big? Leave the one probe on the bus, and move the other one one step upstream. Is that a fuse/breaker? Iterate until you see what point has the drop. 2) Leave it on for a while and then FEEL for the hot connection. But see 3).... 3) If the other poster is correct, the field resistance is ~~15 ohms, vs the ~3 ohms of an auto 50A/13.8 volt alternator. That means the max field current is ~1.8 amps. That feels low, but I've not worked on a 28VDC system in decades, and then it was not the alternator.. -- A host is a host from coast to & no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433 is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433 |
#9
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Filter/Condenser/Capacitor screw had come loose and was bouncing around
inside of alternator (Electrosystems 3eff10300aa, less than a year old!). Unfortunately it took some diodes and the stator coil with it. Replaced alternator. Bus voltage was somewhat high. Cleaned connectors on master switch and plug to voltage regulator, which solved the high bus voltage AND the "bouncing ammeter needle/flickering panel lighting" problems. Thanks to Pete Weston at Gatesville (KGOP) for the assistance! Cheers, John Clonts Temple, Texas N7NZ "John" wrote in message . Most of the 24 volt Cessna's have the over voltage relay built into the regulator. The over voltage protection has two stages. The first stage turns off the field pass transistor. If the voltage still goes higher the second stage turns on a crowbar SCR that blows an internal 5A fuse in the regulator. From what you describe the alternator has field voltage (21.6) so it should be generating current. With power off the field should measure 15-25 ohms. Your brushes may be worn out. I had a problem a few years back where new brushes would not last 50 hours. I finally found that all of the replacement brush springs were too stiff. There is two ways to fix this. Get the springs out of a "OLD" junkyard alternator or cut a 1/4 inch off of the new stiffer springs. I have no idea why the spring stiffness changed but it is noticeable and measurable. John On Thu, 08 Jul 2004 03:53:23 GMT, "John Clonts" wrote: I am now able to reproduce my charging problem. Engine off, Bat and Alt on: Bus voltage: 24.8 Supply to Voltage Regulator: 22.6 Voltage Regulator Output to Alt Field: 21.6 I'm thinking maybe I should rig a jumper from Bus to the Voltage regulator to see if the problem has to do with that 2.2v drop through the "Alt/Reg" 5A circuit breaker, the Alt side of the master switch, and the Overvoltage relay. Any comments from you electrical gurus out there? Can anyone tell me WHERE the overvoltage relay is mounted in my Cessna 210M (1978)? Thanks! John Clonts Temple, Texas N7NZ |
#10
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Nathan Young wrote in message . ..
On Thu, 08 Jul 2004 03:53:23 GMT, "John Clonts" wrote: I am now able to reproduce my charging problem. Engine off, Bat and Alt on: Bus voltage: 24.8 Supply to Voltage Regulator: 22.6 Voltage Regulator Output to Alt Field: 21.6 I'm thinking maybe I should rig a jumper from Bus to the Voltage regulator to see if the problem has to do with that 2.2v drop through the "Alt/Reg" 5A circuit breaker, the Alt side of the master switch, and the Overvoltage relay. John, I didn't see your original charging problem, so cannot comment on that, but will make a few general comments on this post. 21.6 Volts seems like a high field voltage to drive the alternator. What kind of load was on the system during this measurement? I'm not certain, but believe wih minimal load, the field voltage on my 14V system was around 6-7V. The 2.2V drop between the master bus and VR is not good and can lead to several problems in the electrical system. I would fix this before doing anything else. #1. The bus voltage will be high. The VR will crank up the field voltage until its input 'sees' 24V. Given a constant drop of 2.2V between bus and VR, the bus will be at 26.2. #2. If the resistance causing the 2.2V drop is caused by a bad CB, switch, or loose/corroded connection before the OVR, the resistance will vary depending on temperature and turbulence knocking the system around. This will cause OVR cutouts as the OVR will occasionally see the full bus voltage which is 24V + the voltage drop from a second ago (26.2V or higher). #3. Resistance between the master bus and the VR input sets up an RC circuit which (when extreme) can cause charging system oscillation. I like your idea of trying to eliminate the drop between the bus and the VR input by direct connecting it to the bus. (Make sure to have your avionics master OFF when doing this kind of troubleshooting!). Another approach would be to measure the voltage after each of the field CB, field switch, OVR, and VR input. This will probably tell you where the drop is, and you can do this without the plane running. BE EXTRA CAREFUL when probing around under the panel, it is easy to short things with voltmeter probes. -Nathan Nathan, As posted elsewhere I did finally solve the problem. The main problem was the filter capacitor inside the alternator had come loose and was bouncing around in there. Explained my intermittent charging, and then eventually it wiped out the alternator completely. After replacing the alternator the bus voltage was higher than desired, but we were expecting this. We jumpered from +bat to the VR input as described above, and the voltage came down-- confirming the resistance problem. We cleaned the connections on the master switch and on a connector to the VR itself. That solved the high bus voltage problem. It also eliminated my "bouncing ammeter/flickering panel lights", which had been that way ever since we got the plane so I didn't even think it WAS a problem! Thanks for everyone's input-- it's been a great learning experience! Cheers, John Clonts Temple, Texas N7NZ |
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