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Brought my plane home last night after having the alternator rebuilt.
As you can read in my earlier post below, I scoped out the voltage and concluded that the alternator had blown a phase. If a diode had gone, I expected to see ripple with injected spikes that the blown diode would have rectified but didn't. Since I saw a steady ripple with no spike and at a higher peak to peak level than I expected, I concluded that all the diodes were rectifying the same and that the excess A/C component was because a phase of the alternator had gone. This was my conclusion sitting the plane with a scope and reinforced later by some web site that talks about trouble shooting alternator waveform outputs. Prior to having that alternator rebuilt, I had a whine that increased in frequency with RPM and got louder with load. If I shut the battery off, the noise was intolerable. Clearly, the alternator was creating an A/C component that the battery could just not dampen. Below, mikem suggests that the problem was more likely the battery or connections. I believe that the battery does absorb some ripple but it doesn't make sense to me that the alternator output would be so noisy that you couldn't operate the plane with just alternator power. By the way, before this, I had no idea that you could shut the battery off and leave the alternator on. In 10 years of flying airplanes with split master switches, I have never, ever, not once had the alternator on without the battery. Trouble shooting scenarios always assume that if there is a problem, it will be with the alternator and discuss either shutting the alternator off or both. Some people start their plane with the alternator off to reduce starting load and startup power spikes. I actually thought that the switches were mechanically coupled so that it was either both or just the battery. The first time I did shut the alternator off, my first thought, "That's curious, I wonder if my switch is broken!" Anyway, I picked up my plane last night. Started it without the alternator. Cautiously turned the alternator on. No whine. Added load. No whine. Reved it up a bit. No whine. Shut the battery off. No Whine. The ticket says - "Rebuilt and tested." My mechanic says that they found a bad diode. I don't really know if that was THE problem or just part of the problem. Bottom line, removing and reinstalling a rebuilt alternator solved my whine. I continue to believe that the alternator should be creating a steady voltage that should be usable without the dampening effects of the battery. I understand that bad grounding connections, in particular, could impede a radios ability to shed the A/C component but it should only have to shed something like 50mv of ripple - not the .5 to 1.5v that I was seeing. The bill was for 2.5 hours of labor and $273 for the rebuild. $450 total. This was at Kenosha, WI. mikem, are we really talking about the same kind of alternator? Are these alternators typically 3-phase? With 3-phases and the typical diode pack, why would you see 4v p-p? That seems excessive to me. ------------------------------- Travis Lake N3094P PWK "mikem" wrote in message oups.com... Travis Marlatte wrote: . . . I had a whine show up recently. It's was only bothersome with ANR headsets. If you concentrated, you could also hear it with regular headsets. I checked grounds and switches. Nothing made the least bit of difference. Finally, used an oscilloscope to look at the alternator output. Nice consistent ripple. No spikes. But, it was minimally .5 volt p-p growing to 1.5v p-p with load. Typical alternator output ripple should be more like 20mv to 50mv p-p. Travis, if you connected the alternator Field directly to a 2 to 5V DC supply, connected a heavy load (like a couple of landing lights across the alternator output), then you spun the alternator in a drill press or lathe, while viewing the voltage across the load with a scope, you would see about 4V p-p of ripple. Is that a reason to re-build the alternator? No!! It is actually the aircraft battery which "filters" the output of the alternator, and removes the ripple. If you see ripple, it is because there is some resistance in the path between the alternator output and the battery posts, or a bum battery. It could be either in the positive path or in the ground return. I predict that you will still have your ripple when you get your freshly o/h alternator back... Several hundred mV of ripple measured at the B terminal of an alternator is perfectly normal... MikeM |
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