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#1
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I am hoping to tap some of the expertise here to solve a problem I have run
into. I am a retired guy who was called by a local Part 141 school to fill in as their flightline mechanic until they could find a permanent A&P. They have an early 182RG (serial 141) that has an ongoing electrical problem. My first question concerns the ammeter. I have definitely confirmed that the ammeter is defective. It appears like the ENTIRE gage cluster will have to be replaced. The parts manual shows that the original gage is not available. A supersession was listed which also consisted of a single gage. However when this was pursued it was not available as a single replacement. So my question is has anyone come up with a solution for a single defective gage in this cluster that does not involve replacing the entire thing? How about an instrument shop that would rebuild the ammeter? I have been unable to find an instrument shop that would bother with an ammeter. Here's my second question. I think the reason the ammeter broke is that it simply wore out. The voltage and hence the current is constantly varying. The original ammeter needle was oscillating so much that you couldn't tell if the system was charging or not. I put a test ammeter in series and the although the ammeter could be read, it was still oscillating. A check with an analog meter showed fluctuations that increased in frequency as the RPM was increased. Ditto for increasing the load. A scope shows about 900 mv peak. Persons before me have replaced the alternator and regulator. (a note here, the regulator is the simple 3 wire unit) All grounds were cleaned and remade. Any hints of where I should begin my search would be greatly appreciated. I have to pull this beast out of the hanger to run it up. With out Northwest weather I haven't had two clear days to work on it outside and I'm too old and stiff to do a lot under the panel. So any hints or experience of a similar trouble would really be appreciated. I'm going to jumper the alternator field portion of the dual master switch to start with but beyond that ---------------- Thanks in advance Paul Anton |
#2
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Do you have an oscilloscope. Check the alternator output wave form. I'll
bet that you have at least one bad diode. -- Cy Galley - Chair, AirVenture Emergency Aircraft Repair A Service Project of Chapter 75 EAA Safety Programs Editor - TC EAA Sport Pilot "Paul Anton" wrote in message ... I am hoping to tap some of the expertise here to solve a problem I have run into. I am a retired guy who was called by a local Part 141 school to fill in as their flightline mechanic until they could find a permanent A&P. They have an early 182RG (serial 141) that has an ongoing electrical problem. My first question concerns the ammeter. I have definitely confirmed that the ammeter is defective. It appears like the ENTIRE gage cluster will have to be replaced. The parts manual shows that the original gage is not available. A supersession was listed which also consisted of a single gage. However when this was pursued it was not available as a single replacement. So my question is has anyone come up with a solution for a single defective gage in this cluster that does not involve replacing the entire thing? How about an instrument shop that would rebuild the ammeter? I have been unable to find an instrument shop that would bother with an ammeter. Here's my second question. I think the reason the ammeter broke is that it simply wore out. The voltage and hence the current is constantly varying. The original ammeter needle was oscillating so much that you couldn't tell if the system was charging or not. I put a test ammeter in series and the although the ammeter could be read, it was still oscillating. A check with an analog meter showed fluctuations that increased in frequency as the RPM was increased. Ditto for increasing the load. A scope shows about 900 mv peak. Persons before me have replaced the alternator and regulator. (a note here, the regulator is the simple 3 wire unit) All grounds were cleaned and remade. Any hints of where I should begin my search would be greatly appreciated. I have to pull this beast out of the hanger to run it up. With out Northwest weather I haven't had two clear days to work on it outside and I'm too old and stiff to do a lot under the panel. So any hints or experience of a similar trouble would really be appreciated. I'm going to jumper the alternator field portion of the dual master switch to start with but beyond that ---------------- Thanks in advance Paul Anton |
#3
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You did not say what was wrong with the amp meter.
If you replace the cluster Cessna will make sure that owner's pocket will be picked clean because you will have to replace the fuel $ender$ also. I have fixed several amp meters that had high resistance by just tightening up the terminal nuts on the back of the case. The fiber shoulder washers compress after a few years and remove the clamping pressure on the shunt inside the case of the ammeter. This increases the resistance from the terminals to the shunt and makes it run hot and have too much voltage drop. This can cause all sorts of interesting intermittent problems. I would also look at the 60 amp alternator breaker. With age they tend to trip at much lower currents and have too much voltage drop. You can verify this with a 4 wire Kelvin ohm meter setup. With a one amp load every millivolt is one milliohm of resistance. John On Wed, 11 May 2005 18:29:29 -0700, "Paul Anton" wrote: I am hoping to tap some of the expertise here to solve a problem I have run into. I am a retired guy who was called by a local Part 141 school to fill in as their flightline mechanic until they could find a permanent A&P. They have an early 182RG (serial 141) that has an ongoing electrical problem. My first question concerns the ammeter. I have definitely confirmed that the ammeter is defective. It appears like the ENTIRE gage cluster will have to be replaced. The parts manual shows that the original gage is not available. A supersession was listed which also consisted of a single gage. However when this was pursued it was not available as a single replacement. So my question is has anyone come up with a solution for a single defective gage in this cluster that does not involve replacing the entire thing? How about an instrument shop that would rebuild the ammeter? I have been unable to find an instrument shop that would bother with an ammeter. Here's my second question. I think the reason the ammeter broke is that it simply wore out. The voltage and hence the current is constantly varying. The original ammeter needle was oscillating so much that you couldn't tell if the system was charging or not. I put a test ammeter in series and the although the ammeter could be read, it was still oscillating. A check with an analog meter showed fluctuations that increased in frequency as the RPM was increased. Ditto for increasing the load. A scope shows about 900 mv peak. Persons before me have replaced the alternator and regulator. (a note here, the regulator is the simple 3 wire unit) All grounds were cleaned and remade. Any hints of where I should begin my search would be greatly appreciated. I have to pull this beast out of the hanger to run it up. With out Northwest weather I haven't had two clear days to work on it outside and I'm too old and stiff to do a lot under the panel. So any hints or experience of a similar trouble would really be appreciated. I'm going to jumper the alternator field portion of the dual master switch to start with but beyond that ---------------- Thanks in advance Paul Anton |
#4
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Contact Air-Parts of Lock Haven at
http://www.airpartsoflockhaven.com/index.html Their website has a parts catalog and they repair instruments also. They repair my Cessna oil temp gauge. Tom "Paul Anton" wrote in message ... I am hoping to tap some of the expertise here to solve a problem I have run into. I am a retired guy who was called by a local Part 141 school to fill in as their flightline mechanic until they could find a permanent A&P. They have an early 182RG (serial 141) that has an ongoing electrical problem. My first question concerns the ammeter. I have definitely confirmed that the ammeter is defective. It appears like the ENTIRE gage cluster will have to be replaced. The parts manual shows that the original gage is not available. A supersession was listed which also consisted of a single gage. However when this was pursued it was not available as a single replacement. So my question is has anyone come up with a solution for a single defective gage in this cluster that does not involve replacing the entire thing? How about an instrument shop that would rebuild the ammeter? I have been unable to find an instrument shop that would bother with an ammeter. Here's my second question. I think the reason the ammeter broke is that it simply wore out. The voltage and hence the current is constantly varying. The original ammeter needle was oscillating so much that you couldn't tell if the system was charging or not. I put a test ammeter in series and the although the ammeter could be read, it was still oscillating. A check with an analog meter showed fluctuations that increased in frequency as the RPM was increased. Ditto for increasing the load. A scope shows about 900 mv peak. Persons before me have replaced the alternator and regulator. (a note here, the regulator is the simple 3 wire unit) All grounds were cleaned and remade. Any hints of where I should begin my search would be greatly appreciated. I have to pull this beast out of the hanger to run it up. With out Northwest weather I haven't had two clear days to work on it outside and I'm too old and stiff to do a lot under the panel. So any hints or experience of a similar trouble would really be appreciated. I'm going to jumper the alternator field portion of the dual master switch to start with but beyond that ---------------- Thanks in advance Paul Anton |
#5
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![]() Persons before me have replaced the alternator and regulator. (a note here, the regulator is the simple 3 wire unit) All grounds were cleaned and remade. It would be interesting to know why the alternator and regulator were replaced in the first place. Perhaps the same problem? I'd check that old pull-type master switch to see if the alternator control side of it is dirty and letting the alternator relay fall open or chatter. Those old switches had grease in them that got hard with age and collected dust. Dan |
#6
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![]() Forget my last post about the pull-type master switch. I didn't read the original post well enough to see that it was a 182RG, not a 182. Big difference in years. I'm still working on the first cup of coffee this morning. We have 182RG serial 122. No alternator problems. Dan |
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