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On Sep 19, 7:43 am, John wrote:
On Sep 17, 5:10 pm, Andrew Gideon wrote: I vaguely recall someone mentioning to me once that there was an AD regarding cigarette lighters in Cessna 172s of some vintage. But I've searched around trying to find this (including at the FAA web site), and have failed. Anyone have pointers (or is this perhaps an "urban myth")? Thanks... Andrew Here is the AD number and list of applicable aircraft from 120 to T210. I have found I had to perform the service bulletin referenced in the AD on a CE 177RG even though the AD did not apply. A resistor in the cigar lighter system was consistently burning up. The original problem was that the lighter socket went straight to the bus without any circuit protection whatever, and a short in that system caused electrical fires. I think the resistor was in the 177 and some other later Cessnas to drop the 24-volt supply to 12 volts for the standard cigar lighter, and that resistor, carrying so much current, got pretty hot. Any wires that a later technician tied up against it would get burned, too. We have 1-amp fuses in the lighter socket line so that accessories such as GPS can be plugged into it. We don't allow smoking in our airplanes. Smoking ruins gyros in short order, too. Dan |
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On Sep 19, 9:32 am, Newps wrote:
wrote: We have 1-amp fuses in the lighter socket line so that accessories such as GPS can be plugged into it. When I had my 182 I had the mechanic make the lighter socket work again. We went with a 10 amp fuse. 1 amp is not enough current. You must be using the lighter itself. An amp or so is enough for most electronic doodads. Many of them draw only a few milliamps. Dan |
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I learned a while ago that if you want devices to charge reliably you
need a minimum of 1 amp. My Dell Axim X51 will not charge at all with less, the Treo 600 I used to have was the same and my portable satellite radio was the same. That doesn't even factor in running the laptop or portable DVD player the kids like at the same time. wrote: On Sep 19, 9:32 am, Newps wrote: wrote: We have 1-amp fuses in the lighter socket line so that accessories such as GPS can be plugged into it. When I had my 182 I had the mechanic make the lighter socket work again. We went with a 10 amp fuse. 1 amp is not enough current. You must be using the lighter itself. An amp or so is enough for most electronic doodads. Many of them draw only a few milliamps. Dan |
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