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I know that a number of folks have been waiting for hard data on the
current consumption of the new Trig transponder in actual operating conditions. I measured the current consumption today on an actual flight of 2 hours 52 minutes. The flight was in fairly congested airspace all within 10 miles of Turf Soaring school which is located just outside the Phoenix Class B airspace. In fact, some of the flight was under the class B shelf. The transponder was continuously on in ALT mode. I noted that it was being interogated at irregular intervals that averaged about once every one or two seconds. I have two batteries on board. For the test, one battery was powering only the transponder. I had an Astro Flights watt meter connected to the battery which functions to integrate the current consumption and reports actual Ampere Hours of battery draw. Total draw for the flight was measured as .353 AH which calculates to 125 mA average over the duration of the flight. Here's a reference to the Astro Flights watt meter for those that might be interested: http://www.astroflight.com/index.php...=index&cPath=2 I'm an EE and I have independently verified the accuracy of my watt meter against a precision lab instrument. Steve Koerner www.wingrigger.com |
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Congrats on that Flight Steve. As your Wing runner for the launch, I
know that you flew today without a vario. very Impressive. |
#3
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On Mar 14, 11:37*pm, Steve Koerner wrote:
I know that a number of folks have been waiting for hard data on the current consumption of the new Trig transponder in actual operating conditions. I measured the current consumption today on an actual flight of 2 hours 52 minutes. * The flight was in fairly congested airspace all within 10 miles of Turf Soaring school which is located just outside the Phoenix Class B airspace. * In fact, some of the flight was under the class B shelf. * The transponder was continuously on in ALT mode. I noted that it was being interogated at irregular intervals that averaged about once every one or two seconds. I have two batteries on board. *For the test, one battery was powering only the transponder. *I had an Astro Flights watt meter connected to the battery which functions to integrate the current consumption and reports actual Ampere Hours of battery draw. * Total draw for the flight was measured as .353 AH which calculates to 125 mA average over the duration of the flight. Here's a reference to the Astro Flights watt meter for those that might be interested:http://www.astroflight.com/index.php...=index&cPath=2 I'm an EE and I have independently verified the accuracy of my watt meter against a precision lab instrument. Steve Koernerwww.wingrigger.com Nice work Steve, Some additional information which verifies your findings: The avionics shop I work for has installed these TRIG TT21 's in 8 gliders so far.....we have three more in line for installs. We bench test them before install, and our ampmeter shows below 200 ma. We then tested a glider with everything installed, and using our test box to continuously interrogate the TRIG. We also have one of those Astro Flight watt meters! If I remember, 200ma is the highest we saw on the TRIG. We then added vario, then Comm radio on standby, comm radio on receive, and finally comm radio on transmit. I think it was 700ma or 800ma for everything running at full blast. We did sime calculations figuring the comm at transmit for 10% of the time, and recieve at 30% of the time and standby at 60%.......and the vario at 150 ma and the trig at 200 ma.......... This glider has a 12 MAH battery.......should easily run for 12 hours if fully charged and in good shape. It is the comm radio which is the power hog, not the TRIG.........Any glider that is now running with a big enough battery for the equimment installed, could add a TRIG to the circuit. The additional drain of the TRIG is almost insignificant. No need for an additional battery in my opinion. Gliders that already have two batteries really have it made regarding the TRIG. BTW........on the bench tests, the TRIG TT21 puts out 125W to 160W at the antenna cable........Our test rig does not show smaller increments, so the real output is somehwere between 125W and 160W. Cookie |
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I fly now for 2 years with a Garrecht ultra compact transponder, and the
addition of the transponder, which always on ALT in the air has not significantly changed the number of hours I get out of my batteries. The hx4700 draws much more than the transponder. Am 15.03.2010 04:37, schrieb Steve Koerner: I know that a number of folks have been waiting for hard data on the current consumption of the new Trig transponder in actual operating conditions. I measured the current consumption today on an actual flight of 2 hours 52 minutes. The flight was in fairly congested airspace all within 10 miles of Turf Soaring school which is located just outside the Phoenix Class B airspace. In fact, some of the flight was under the class B shelf. The transponder was continuously on in ALT mode. I noted that it was being interogated at irregular intervals that averaged about once every one or two seconds. I have two batteries on board. For the test, one battery was powering only the transponder. I had an Astro Flights watt meter connected to the battery which functions to integrate the current consumption and reports actual Ampere Hours of battery draw. Total draw for the flight was measured as .353 AH which calculates to 125 mA average over the duration of the flight. Here's a reference to the Astro Flights watt meter for those that might be interested: http://www.astroflight.com/index.php...=index&cPath=2 I'm an EE and I have independently verified the accuracy of my watt meter against a precision lab instrument. Steve Koerner www.wingrigger.com |
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On Mar 15, 12:53*pm, hans wrote:
I fly now for 2 years with a Garrecht ultra compact transponder, and the addition of the transponder, which always on ALT in the air has not significantly changed the number of hours I get out of my batteries. The hx4700 draws much more than the transponder. Am 15.03.2010 04:37, schrieb Steve Koerner: I know that a number of folks have been waiting for hard data on the current consumption of the new Trig transponder in actual operating conditions. I measured the current consumption today on an actual flight of 2 hours 52 minutes. * The flight was in fairly congested airspace all within 10 miles of Turf Soaring school which is located just outside the Phoenix Class B airspace. * In fact, some of the flight was under the class B shelf. * The transponder was continuously on in ALT mode. I noted that it was being interogated at irregular intervals that averaged about once every one or two seconds. I have two batteries on board. *For the test, one battery was powering only the transponder. *I had an Astro Flights watt meter connected to the battery which functions to integrate the current consumption and reports actual Ampere Hours of battery draw. * Total draw for the flight was measured as .353 AH which calculates to 125 mA average over the duration of the flight. Here's a reference to the Astro Flights watt meter for those that might be interested: http://www.astroflight.com/index.php...=index&cPath=2 I'm an EE and I have independently verified the accuracy of my watt meter against a precision lab instrument. Steve Koerner www.wingrigger.com Yes, don't leave out the PDA/PNA, in my glider an HP310 consumes about the same if not more than a Microair Transponder. Brian |
#6
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On Mar 15, 2:00*pm, brianDG303 wrote:
Yes, don't leave out the PDA/PNA, in my glider an HP310 consumes about the same if not more than a Microair Transponder. I'm pretty sure Steve's intention was to report the current drawn by only the TT-21 and not all the other equipment he has in the glider. This infromation is useful to others who may be considering buying the unit. Had he included the ClearNav, PDA, heated socks, etc we would have learned nothing from his post. Andy |
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