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#1
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I have a Sigtronics SPA-400 intercom in my Cherokee. Everything works
fine, except that the right seat position has an annoying amount of electrical noise in the headset. It is a high-pitch whine (alternator noise), and the pitch seems to follow RPM. This is not noticable in the pilot's headset, even with the headset volume at full. It is much less noticable in the right seat headset with the headset volume turned all the way down, but obviously this makes things harder to hear for the right seat occupant (often another pilot). In an attempt to rectify the problem, I replaced the intercom wiring with shielded Tefzel cable, replaced all of the jacks, and isolated all of the jacks from the panel with fiber shoulder washers and brought everything back to a single point ground. That helped, but only slightly. I'm trying to figure out what's causing it or, at least, how to stop it on that particular jack. Obviously, the intercom wiring runs adjacent to the electrical buses on that side of the panel, so I'm not sure what role the buses may play, especially since I'm using shielded cable. Does anyone have any ideas? Thanks, JKG |
#2
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I'm trying to figure out what's causing it or, at least, how to stop it
on that particular jack. Obviously, the intercom wiring runs adjacent to the electrical buses on that side of the panel, so I'm not sure what role the buses may play, especially since I'm using shielded cable. Well, if it makes you feel any better, the co-pilot's jack in our Pathfinder has a bit of whine in it, too. None of the other jacks do. It's not bothersome, and I always figured it was the proximity to the electrical bus. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#3
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On 8 Apr 2006 20:18:37 -0700, "Jay Honeck" wrote:
I'm trying to figure out what's causing it or, at least, how to stop it on that particular jack. Obviously, the intercom wiring runs adjacent to the electrical buses on that side of the panel, so I'm not sure what role the buses may play, especially since I'm using shielded cable. Well, if it makes you feel any better, the co-pilot's jack in our Pathfinder has a bit of whine in it, too. None of the other jacks do. It's not bothersome, and I always figured it was the proximity to the electrical bus. Well, I'm sure it would be contrary to the regs to solder a 0.1 microfarad capacitor across the earphone terminals on the right-seat headset jack. It's even a bad idea to try it with some alligator clips first to see if it works. Don |
#4
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In article .com,
"Jay Honeck" wrote: Well, if it makes you feel any better, the co-pilot's jack in our Pathfinder has a bit of whine in it, too. None of the other jacks do. It's not bothersome, and I always figured it was the proximity to the electrical bus. On my installation, the whine is only slightly noticeable with the headset volume at its lowest, but then I have to turn up the radio/intercom volume to compensate, which distorts the audio. When I turn the headset volume up to high, the whine drives me crazy after about 15-20 minutes or so. Of course, I would never experiment with a capacitor that may be in violation of the regs, even if it would enhance comfort and safety. That's just something that I don't do during the week. JKG |
#5
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What you describe is classical ground-loop troubles. Your first attempt to
fix the problem should have done it... insulating the jacks from the panel (mics in particular). If that truly didn't fix it, you may need to look at other ground locations. You did say you replaced/insulated *all* jacks, right? You can try relocating the ground on the Sigtronics to another location (like the same location as where the audio panel connects would be good). With a large number of older avionics with a single-ended design, the noise could be coming from other places. As far as the *location* being the copilot, you could check to make sure that when the plug is inserted into the jack that it doesn't touch anything when the prongs spread. IIRC, the SPA-400 has pilot/copilot isolation, so the signal will have different paths depending on which plug is connected... separate internal circuits. Basically, troubleshooting ground loops sucks. -Cory Jonathan Goodish wrote: : I have a Sigtronics SPA-400 intercom in my Cherokee. Everything works : fine, except that the right seat position has an annoying amount of : electrical noise in the headset. It is a high-pitch whine (alternator : noise), and the pitch seems to follow RPM. This is not noticable in the : pilot's headset, even with the headset volume at full. It is much less : noticable in the right seat headset with the headset volume turned all : the way down, but obviously this makes things harder to hear for the : right seat occupant (often another pilot). : In an attempt to rectify the problem, I replaced the intercom wiring : with shielded Tefzel cable, replaced all of the jacks, and isolated all : of the jacks from the panel with fiber shoulder washers and brought : everything back to a single point ground. That helped, but only slightly. : I'm trying to figure out what's causing it or, at least, how to stop it : on that particular jack. Obviously, the intercom wiring runs adjacent to : the electrical buses on that side of the panel, so I'm not sure what : role the buses may play, especially since I'm using shielded cable. : Does anyone have any ideas? : Thanks, : JKG -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
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#7
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I'm not convinced that it's a ground loop because the intercom system
has a single-point ground. I have the system grounded where at least SOME other avionics are grounded, but not sure that all avionics are grounded at that point Lift that single ground ground and verify with a continuity test that with power off, the intercom system is now floating. Make sure there there isn't some other sneak path to ground that you don't know about. The frequency of the alternator whine isn't so high that it would be capacitively coupling into all but high impedance circuits. If it is noise is present on the B+ line, it should be present at both headset locations, and a simple power supply filter should take care of it. I'd be suspicious of the ground/common connection between the alternator and the battery. It should be done only with heavy wires, and not involve the airframe to carry the alternator current. Another ground loop vs B+ capacitive coupling check - does the whine become worse as the alternator load is increased, say by turning on pitot heat and the landing lights? If so, it is more likely a ground problem. |
#8
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In article .com,
"nrp" wrote: I'm not convinced that it's a ground loop because the intercom system has a single-point ground. I have the system grounded where at least SOME other avionics are grounded, but not sure that all avionics are grounded at that point Lift that single ground ground and verify with a continuity test that with power off, the intercom system is now floating. Make sure there there isn't some other sneak path to ground that you don't know about. I am quite confident that there is no sneak path to ground from the intercom system, because I had everything disconnected when I rewired (including the wiring harness). All jacks are isolated with fiber shoulder washers. If there is a sneak path, I'm not sure where it would be unless the SPA-400 is grounding through the mounting screws or on/off switch barrel, but in that case I would expect the whine to be system-wide. Another ground loop vs B+ capacitive coupling check - does the whine become worse as the alternator load is increased, say by turning on pitot heat and the landing lights? If so, it is more likely a ground problem. Well, the whine goes away completely when the alternator side of the master switch is turned off. I would say that it gets slightly worse as more load is placed on the bus (landing light and pitot heat, for example.) It is virtually non-existent in the pilot side, and is very noticeable on the copilot side. Before I dug into the intercom wiring last year, I did clean up the ground at the battery box and strobe power supply (strobe noise problem mostly cured with new power supply.) However, I haven't cleaned airframe to engine ground or any grounds under the panel (other than intercom system.) Thanks, JKG |
#9
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Jonathan Goodish wrote:
In article .com, "nrp" wrote: I'm not convinced that it's a ground loop because the intercom system has a single-point ground. I have the system grounded where at least SOME other avionics are grounded, but not sure that all avionics are grounded at that point Lift that single ground ground and verify with a continuity test that with power off, the intercom system is now floating. Make sure there there isn't some other sneak path to ground that you don't know about. I am quite confident that there is no sneak path to ground from the intercom system, because I had everything disconnected when I rewired (including the wiring harness). All jacks are isolated with fiber shoulder washers. If there is a sneak path, I'm not sure where it would be unless the SPA-400 is grounding through the mounting screws or on/off switch barrel, but in that case I would expect the whine to be system-wide. Another ground loop vs B+ capacitive coupling check - does the whine become worse as the alternator load is increased, say by turning on pitot heat and the landing lights? If so, it is more likely a ground problem. Well, the whine goes away completely when the alternator side of the master switch is turned off. I would say that it gets slightly worse as more load is placed on the bus (landing light and pitot heat, for example.) It is virtually non-existent in the pilot side, and is very noticeable on the copilot side. Before I dug into the intercom wiring last year, I did clean up the ground at the battery box and strobe power supply (strobe noise problem mostly cured with new power supply.) However, I haven't cleaned airframe to engine ground or any grounds under the panel (other than intercom system.) It still has the smell of a ground loop if the intercom power supply filtering is OK. Maybe a ground loop between the intercom and the radios (audio panel)? -- Tauno Voipio tauno voipio (at) iki fi |
#10
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