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#1
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Does anyone know how to go about trouble shooting a Whelan strobe
light? It is on a Piper Cherokee and is the "beacon" of the airplane. I had an extra bulb I don't know the status of and swapped it out, but still didn't get any emission. I'm thinking that its probably the unit, but I don't know how to prove it since it isn't a continuous power light. There are 3 wires on the clip. A white, black, and red. I think the red is what gives the pulse to the strobe and the black is ground of course. The white has a sticker on it that says 13V so my assumption is that that should be continuous power. Is my assumption correct? If it is I know its the unit because I don't get any reading on the meter when I connect to the black and white wires. Is there somewhere I can look to get additional information? Any help would be appreciated. At 350 dollars I'd like to be sure I'm replacing the correct part and don't just need the 75 dollar bulb. TIA for any responses. z |
#2
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I had a similar problem and returned it to Whelan. They repaired the
power supply and returned it to me. Much cheaper than a new one and the turn around was pretty quick. I called ahead to talk to service. Ross zatatime wrote: Does anyone know how to go about trouble shooting a Whelan strobe light? It is on a Piper Cherokee and is the "beacon" of the airplane. I had an extra bulb I don't know the status of and swapped it out, but still didn't get any emission. I'm thinking that its probably the unit, but I don't know how to prove it since it isn't a continuous power light. There are 3 wires on the clip. A white, black, and red. I think the red is what gives the pulse to the strobe and the black is ground of course. The white has a sticker on it that says 13V so my assumption is that that should be continuous power. Is my assumption correct? If it is I know its the unit because I don't get any reading on the meter when I connect to the black and white wires. Is there somewhere I can look to get additional information? Any help would be appreciated. At 350 dollars I'd like to be sure I'm replacing the correct part and don't just need the 75 dollar bulb. TIA for any responses. z |
#3
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zatatime wrote:
Does anyone know how to go about trouble shooting a Whelan strobe light? When power is applied to the power supply, you should hear a faint whistle. If you don't hear the whistle, you probably have a bad power supply (or you need to get your hearing checked ![]() --- Jay -- __!__ Jay and Teresa Masino ___(_)___ http://www2.ari.net/jmasino ! ! ! http://www.oceancityairport.com http://www.oc-adolfos.com |
#4
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On Wed, 07 Jul 2004 11:42:29 -0500, Ross Richardson
wrote: I had a similar problem and returned it to Whelan. They repaired the power supply and returned it to me. Much cheaper than a new one and the turn around was pretty quick. I called ahead to talk to service. Ross Thanks. I got a quote of $150 to rebuild. They said about a week to turn it around, so it looks like that's the right answer. Thanks for the help. z |
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#6
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In article , Jay Masino
wrote: zatatime wrote: Does anyone know how to go about trouble shooting a Whelan strobe light? When power is applied to the power supply, you should hear a faint whistle. If you don't hear the whistle, you probably have a bad power supply (or you need to get your hearing checked ![]() Or a bad capacitor. |
#7
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I do not remember the colors but of the three wires to the flash lamp:
wire A (red?) +450 VDC wire B (black?) Ground wire C (white?) 200 volt pulse to flash lamp trigger transformer If you do not have over 400 volts DC to chassis on one wire the power supply is bad. There is enough 450 volt energy in the storage cap to kill you so be careful. On Wed, 07 Jul 2004 15:35:08 GMT, zatatime wrote: Does anyone know how to go about trouble shooting a Whelan strobe light? It is on a Piper Cherokee and is the "beacon" of the airplane. I had an extra bulb I don't know the status of and swapped it out, but still didn't get any emission. I'm thinking that its probably the unit, but I don't know how to prove it since it isn't a continuous power light. There are 3 wires on the clip. A white, black, and red. I think the red is what gives the pulse to the strobe and the black is ground of course. The white has a sticker on it that says 13V so my assumption is that that should be continuous power. Is my assumption correct? If it is I know its the unit because I don't get any reading on the meter when I connect to the black and white wires. Is there somewhere I can look to get additional information? Any help would be appreciated. At 350 dollars I'd like to be sure I'm replacing the correct part and don't just need the 75 dollar bulb. TIA for any responses. z |
#8
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![]() There are 3 wires on the clip. A white, black, and red. The Whelan web site has lots of wiring diagrams that might help. There are also schematics of their flash "units" (which probably are wired the same) in their automotive section. Jim |
#9
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#10
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