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I still haven't had time to work with my A&P to remove my (newly)
flakey JPI EDM-700 unit. (As you may recall, some of the LED segments that make up the number display are going in and out.) Someone here suggested that it might be due to low voltage, possibly indicating an alternator problem. I've started watching the voltage, and have noticed something odd: The JPI has its own built-in voltage indicator. It will usually read 13.4 or 13.5 volts. We also have a stand-alone, panel-mounted digital voltage/amperage meter, mounted a few inches below the JPI. It usually reads a few tenths of a volt different than the JPI. (I can't remember if it's up or down...) a) Is this normal? Why would they read different voltages? b) What voltage is normal? Is 13.4 too low? Thanks! -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#2
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message ups.com... I still haven't had time to work with my A&P to remove my (newly) flakey JPI EDM-700 unit. (As you may recall, some of the LED segments that make up the number display are going in and out.) Someone here suggested that it might be due to low voltage, possibly indicating an alternator problem. I've started watching the voltage, and have noticed something odd: The JPI has its own built-in voltage indicator. It will usually read 13.4 or 13.5 volts. We also have a stand-alone, panel-mounted digital voltage/amperage meter, mounted a few inches below the JPI. It usually reads a few tenths of a volt different than the JPI. (I can't remember if it's up or down...) a) Is this normal? Why would they read different voltages? There are numerous reasons, which might be additive: Gauge calibration. Different wire paths to the gauges leading to different voltage drop before the electrons get to the gauge.. Different wire sizes, leading to different voltage drop. Corrosion in connections. Loose connections. Etc. b) What voltage is normal? Is 13.4 too low? 13.4 is a *little* low, but that could easily be a gauge calibration issue or a voltage regultor that needs a slight tweak. Thanks! -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#3
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Jay Honeck writes:
The JPI has its own built-in voltage indicator. It will usually read 13.4 or 13.5 volts. We also have a stand-alone, panel-mounted digital voltage/amperage meter, mounted a few inches below the JPI. It usually reads a few tenths of a volt different than the JPI. (I can't remember if it's up or down...) a) Is this normal? Why would they read different voltages? Yes normal. Many reasons, all of the don't bother ilk. b) What voltage is normal? Is 13.4 too low? That is low. A charging L-A battery will be at/near 14.4v. You'll have some drop between it & the buss, but... ....Under what load do yue see 14.4? How long after starting? What is the voltage at moderate RPM with no loads, & with the JPI on so you can see its reading? With every frigging thing on, including the Jacuzzi and the landing lights? [We'll skip cycling the gear....] -- 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 |
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b) What voltage is normal? Is 13.4 too low?
That is low. A charging L-A battery will be at/near 14.4v. You'll have some drop between it & the buss, but... ...Under what load do yue see 14.4? How long after starting? That's 13.4 or .5 in cruise flight, with two nav/coms and strobes on. Probably turning 2300 RPM, say, ten minutes after launching. What is the voltage at moderate RPM with no loads, & with the JPI on so you can see its reading? With every frigging thing on, including the Jacuzzi and the landing lights? [We'll skip cycling the gear....] Dunno. I'll have to record these, next time I fly. The sealed battery is maybe a year old. Cranks just fine. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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On Sun, 23 Sep 2007 13:31:10 -0700, Jay Honeck
wrote: I still haven't had time to work with my A&P to remove my (newly) flakey JPI EDM-700 unit. (As you may recall, some of the LED segments that make up the number display are going in and out.) Someone here suggested that it might be due to low voltage, possibly indicating an alternator problem. I've started watching the voltage, and have noticed something odd: The JPI has its own built-in voltage indicator. It will usually read 13.4 or 13.5 volts. We also have a stand-alone, panel-mounted digital voltage/amperage meter, mounted a few inches below the JPI. It usually reads a few tenths of a volt different than the JPI. (I can't remember if it's up or down...) a) Is this normal? Why would they read different voltages? b) What voltage is normal? Is 13.4 too low? Thanks! I have found that the JPI is very sensitive to voltage. I have a persistent voltage drop in my system which is exacerbated by putting the landing gear up or down. This causes a large current draw by the gear pump motor, which due to resistance somewhere, causes a voltage spike downwards. My JPI reboots as a result of this, and is the only actual symptom. Other avionics are unaffected, so this problem is not severe, but it does bug me. This effect has been noted by many members of Cardinal Flyers Online over the years, as I found when I was researching it. I used to have an inflight voltage of under 13.0 when all electricals were on, or maybe 13.3 with the "usual" load. I have had some work done on my electrical system, including replacing old components and wiring, which cleared the problem up for a time. Now my voltage is a steady 13.7, but I think this is still somewhat low, and the JPI reset problem is starting to occur again. In principle this is not hard to troubleshoot. With the engine running and a full electrical load, simply measure the voltage starting at the alternator and moving back to the avionics buss and battery, at all possible points. At the alternator it should be over 14.0 I think. This should isolate where there is a voltage drop, and therefore too much resistance. So I think 13.4 is too low, at least it is in my plane. I would like to see 14.0. And you should determine exactly where the JPI and your panel voltmeter are connected, because a few tenths of a volt difference is certainly pointing to excess resistance between them. randall g =%^) PPASEL+Night 1974 Cardinal RG http://www.telemark.net/randallg Lots of aerial photographs of British Columbia at: http://www.telemark.net/randallg/photos.htm Vancouver's famous Kat Kam: http://www.katkam.ca |
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Jay Honeck writes:
...Under what load do yue see 14.4? How long after starting? That's 13.4 or .5 in cruise flight, with two nav/coms and strobes on. Probably turning 2300 RPM, say, ten minutes after launching. What is the voltage at moderate RPM with no loads, & with the JPI on so you can see its reading? With every frigging thing on, including the Jacuzzi and the landing lights? [We'll skip cycling the gear....] Dunno. I'll have to record these, next time I fly. The sealed battery is maybe a year old. Cranks just fine. OK, I asked "how long" because the voltage post-cranking may be lower. The real question is: what've the voltage at the battery terminals? But that's hard to measure in flight... -- 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 |
#7
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randall g writes:
In principle this is not hard to troubleshoot. With the engine running and a full electrical load, simply measure the voltage starting at the alternator and moving back to the avionics buss and battery, at all possible points. At the alternator it should be over 14.0 I think. This should isolate where there is a voltage drop, and therefore too much resistance. The problem is; on a car you have to dodge the radiator fan, but if I'd ever worked on a plane (not me!!!! That would Be Wrong..) I'd wonder if that big fan out front did not make life lots harder... and THAT's while it is sitting still. But a good test is, after the voltage is stable [ie the starting drain has been recouped..] is to go from no load to fax load while looking at the voltage. What we are asking is: what's the voltage drop between the battery and the avionics buss? If it is drop in the wiring, looking at no load will show a voltage ~identical to that at the battery. -- 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 |
#8
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Jay Honeck wrote:
The JPI has its own built-in voltage indicator. It will usually read 13.4 or 13.5 volts. We also have a stand-alone, panel-mounted digital voltage/amperage meter, mounted a few inches below the JPI. It usually reads a few tenths of a volt different than the JPI. a) Is this normal? Why would they read different voltages? Disclaimer: This is based on experience with ground vehicles and equipment. I don't have an A&P; I don't even have a TG&Y. Your mileage may vary. Probably. The reasons have been well covered by other posters. If the JPI is coming out soon, it might be interesting to pull the other meter as well. Connect both of them to a 12 V battery sitting on a table - with the same gauge and lengths of wire - and see what they read. If they disagree under "ideal" conditions, they'll never agree in the plane. (Alternatively, leave the other meter in the panel, but disconnect the wires to the plane temporarily, and hook up wires from the meter to a stand-alone battery.) If the meters don't agree, the next question is "How do you know which one is right?" The absolutely correct answer is to measure a known standard voltage, and the pretty good answer is to compare to a known-accurate meter. The trick is to find either of these things. ![]() I guarantee that one (probably both) of them exist up in Cedar Rapids at that little radio company up there. Getting to _use_ them is another story. A new or nearly-nuke Fluke DMM with a fresh battery is probably the easiest thing to get your hands on that has a decent chance of being accurate. "A man with a watch knows what time it is. A man with two watches is never sure." -- Segal's Law, as quoted at http://tycho.usno.navy.mil/clocks.html b) What voltage is normal? Is 13.4 too low? It depends. If you're measuring at the battery terminals, anything below about 12.6 or 12.7 V with the engine running at cruise speed is too low - this means the alternator/generator is most likely not charging the battery. Anything above about 15.0 V measured under the same conditions is too high. Anything in between could be considered "normal". Some numbers that get thrown around for a nominal system voltage for a 12 V battery include 13.8 V and 14.0 V. I have a mid-60s King nav/com (hollow state!) that lists 13.75 V on the name plate. If you want to get specific, AC 43.13-1A Change 3, paragraph 442, says "The voltage drop in the main power wires from the generation source or the battery to the bus should not exceed 2 percent of the regulated voltage, when the generator is carrying rated current or the battery is being discharged at the 5-minute rate." There is also a table that shows the "maximum acceptable voltage drop in the load circuits between the bus and the utilization equipment." For a 14 V nominal system, this is 0.5 V for continuous operation and 1 V for intermittent operation. In other words, if your generator or alternator is designed for a regulated voltage of 14.0 V, the minimum bus voltage would be 13.72 V, and the minimum voltage you would expect at a continuously-powered piece of equipment would be 13.22 V. If the regulated voltage is 13.8 V, these change to 13.52 V at the bus and 13.02 V at the equipment. In practical terms, if you want to power something from a 12 V nominal vehicle electrical system, it should probably _work_ on anything from about 11.0 V to 15.0 V, _survive_ anything from 10.99 V down to zero, and not explode immediately if fed more than 15.0 V. This is somewhat dependent on how much current the thing draws - it's a little easier to make a low-current device work over a large range of input voltages than a high-current one. It also depends on intended application. It's OK if your in-flight DVD player cuts out at 12.0 V; your landing light should still work down to 9.0 or 10.0 V in case you have to land at night with a dead alternator and discharged battery. Disclaimer: This is based on experience with ground vehicles and equipment. I don't have an A&P; I don't even have a TG&Y. Your mileage may vary. Matt Roberds |
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#10
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Jay Honeck wrote:
I still haven't had time to work with my A&P to remove my (newly) flakey JPI EDM-700 unit. (As you may recall, some of the LED segments that make up the number display are going in and out.) Someone here suggested that it might be due to low voltage, possibly indicating an alternator problem. I've started watching the voltage, and have noticed something odd: The JPI has its own built-in voltage indicator. It will usually read 13.4 or 13.5 volts. We also have a stand-alone, panel-mounted digital voltage/amperage meter, mounted a few inches below the JPI. It usually reads a few tenths of a volt different than the JPI. (I can't remember if it's up or down...) Your Lowrance 2000C has a voltage indicator that can be configured on a screen, it will replace one of your other displayed options... |
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