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#1
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Hi All,
I'm looking for recommendations for a low battery warning voltage level. I was going to use 12.8V - is this liable to be triggered by noise/dips in the bus voltage? My guess is when heaters or motors kick in there could be a momentary drop due to high current that could trigger my low voltage indicator. Also it it worth putting a long time constant filter on this? Thanks! Mark. |
#2
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The 12 volt generator/alternator will be at 14-15 volts
nominal when within the working range of RPM. The voltage regulator should keep the voltage within that range without any significant variation. Just what are you intending to be warned against? The load meter gauge shows the load being carried by the generator system, the ammeter shows whether the generator or battery is supplying the power being used, An ammeter should be showing only a slight charge all the time as it keeps the battery "topped off." If the battery is any good, the ammeter will return to low indicated charge within a few minutes after starting the engine. At a low idle, the battery will show a discharge because the generator is not carrying the load and the battery is discharging to carry what the demand is at the time. This is not a problem in the short term, such as a power-off landing or glide, but anytime that the engine is in the power range, the generator [alternator] should be carrying all the load. Power relays need about 10 volts to stay engaged. If you are building a home-built airplane, you could have a yellow warning light at less than 13.9 volts and a red warning at 12.8. Open cell no-load voltage is 2.2 volts or 13.2 volts on a lead/acid battery. Certificated aircraft require certificated parts. You can get a cigarette lighter plug-in monitor. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P -- Merry Christmas Have a Safe and Happy New Year Live Long and Prosper Jim Macklin "markp" wrote in message ... | Hi All, | | I'm looking for recommendations for a low battery warning voltage level. I | was going to use 12.8V - is this liable to be triggered by noise/dips in the | bus voltage? My guess is when heaters or motors kick in there could be a | momentary drop due to high current that could trigger my low voltage | indicator. Also it it worth putting a long time constant filter on this? | | Thanks! | | Mark. | | | |
#3
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Thanks Jim.
I'm an electronics designer, I have been asked by my customer to provide a warning when battery volts drop below 12.5V. I already measure voltage with a data logger. The logger has an accuracy of +/- 2% on bus rail voltage monitoring (this is around +/-0.25V at 12.5V). My customer wants a warning when battery voltage goes below 12.5V irrespective of whether the engine is running or not. To achieve this the threshold must be set at 12.75V to guarantee catching 12.5V, but it could of course be the other way round and we'll actually warn at 13V. All a bit hairy really. Given the inherent inaccuracy, I'm concerned that this voltage warning will be triggered un-necessarily and is essentially impractical when set to 12.75V. Personally I'd put the threshold to 12.5V nominal and have a large time constant filter on it to catch glitches and momentary dips - this would trigger at a minimum of 12.25V, max 12.75V. I can also measure engine speed with the logger and inhibit warnings under 50% rpm when the alternator is not charging, this is currently what the prototype sytem does and is reliable, but my customer wants warnings below 12.5V regardless. Any comments welcomed! Regards, Mark "Jim Macklin" wrote in message news:22mqf.30260$QW2.2267@dukeread08... The 12 volt generator/alternator will be at 14-15 volts nominal when within the working range of RPM. The voltage regulator should keep the voltage within that range without any significant variation. Just what are you intending to be warned against? The load meter gauge shows the load being carried by the generator system, the ammeter shows whether the generator or battery is supplying the power being used, An ammeter should be showing only a slight charge all the time as it keeps the battery "topped off." If the battery is any good, the ammeter will return to low indicated charge within a few minutes after starting the engine. At a low idle, the battery will show a discharge because the generator is not carrying the load and the battery is discharging to carry what the demand is at the time. This is not a problem in the short term, such as a power-off landing or glide, but anytime that the engine is in the power range, the generator [alternator] should be carrying all the load. Power relays need about 10 volts to stay engaged. If you are building a home-built airplane, you could have a yellow warning light at less than 13.9 volts and a red warning at 12.8. Open cell no-load voltage is 2.2 volts or 13.2 volts on a lead/acid battery. Certificated aircraft require certificated parts. You can get a cigarette lighter plug-in monitor. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P -- Merry Christmas Have a Safe and Happy New Year Live Long and Prosper Jim Macklin "markp" wrote in message ... | Hi All, | | I'm looking for recommendations for a low battery warning voltage level. I | was going to use 12.8V - is this liable to be triggered by noise/dips in the | bus voltage? My guess is when heaters or motors kick in there could be a | momentary drop due to high current that could trigger my low voltage | indicator. Also it it worth putting a long time constant filter on this? | | Thanks! | | Mark. | | | |
#4
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My customer wants a warning
when battery voltage goes below 12.5V irrespective of whether the engine is running or not. [...] Personally I'd put the threshold to 12.5V nominal and have a large time constant filter on it to catch glitches and momentary dips - this would trigger at a minimum of 12.25V, max 12.75V. Ask the customer how long a dip they would tolerate without a warning, and why. An intellegent answer may require some dialog. And wouldn't a large time constant filter =miss= momentary dips? That's what it's for - to ignore the quick stuff and only warn on the more permanent stuff. Jose -- You can choose whom to befriend, but you cannot choose whom to love. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#5
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![]() Ask the customer how long a dip they would tolerate without a warning, and why. An intellegent answer may require some dialog. And wouldn't a large time constant filter =miss= momentary dips? That's what it's for - to ignore the quick stuff and only warn on the more permanent stuff. Yes, this is what I meant, filter out the momentary dips so it doesn't trigger the warning. |
#6
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From a practical psychological standpoint, a warning should
be only for a serious failure, and not a routine variation. When you get a flashing red light with every power reduction, pretty soon the red light will have lost its warning effect. From a pilot's perspective, I would like an alert that the voltage is below a level that will maintain the battery, about 13.5 volts with a steady yellow light, but I'd want to have a flashing red if the voltage was below the 12 volt level. This would happen only with a dead cell in the battery or with a complete charging failure and be soon enough to give time to reduce loads and make a safe landing, but not cry wolf too often. With some computer logic, you could monitor rpm of the engine and the alternator and perhaps even the performance of the voltage regulator (dwell time?). You might contact Bob Nuckolls [Wichita, KS](see EAA Sport Pilot magazine back issues for his address/contact info). He is an engineer and pilot who might have some useful ideas and FAA certification input. Obviously you can make an engineering research device to sample the electrical system for data every second and to store data on a flash memory chip (USB drive) to include temperatures, rpm, volts, amps, data which can be used in a laboratory. But a pilot doesn't need to know more than it is working or it isn't...time to land ASAP. I like the airplane to have a volt meter and a load meter. If the voltage is "in the green" and the load is less than 85% continuous, with all the lights and loads ON, I'm happy. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P -- Merry Christmas Have a Safe and Happy New Year Live Long and Prosper Jim Macklin "markp" wrote in message ... | Thanks Jim. | | I'm an electronics designer, I have been asked by my customer to provide a | warning when battery volts drop below 12.5V. I already measure voltage with | a data logger. The logger has an accuracy of +/- 2% on bus rail voltage | monitoring (this is around +/-0.25V at 12.5V). My customer wants a warning | when battery voltage goes below 12.5V irrespective of whether the engine is | running or not. To achieve this the threshold must be set at 12.75V to | guarantee catching 12.5V, but it could of course be the other way round and | we'll actually warn at 13V. All a bit hairy really. | | Given the inherent inaccuracy, I'm concerned that this voltage warning will | be triggered un-necessarily and is essentially impractical when set to | 12.75V. Personally I'd put the threshold to 12.5V nominal and have a large | time constant filter on it to catch glitches and momentary dips - this would | trigger at a minimum of 12.25V, max 12.75V. I can also measure engine speed | with the logger and inhibit warnings under 50% rpm when the alternator is | not charging, this is currently what the prototype sytem does and is | reliable, but my customer wants warnings below 12.5V regardless. | | Any comments welcomed! | | Regards, | | Mark | | | "Jim Macklin" wrote in message | news:22mqf.30260$QW2.2267@dukeread08... | The 12 volt generator/alternator will be at 14-15 volts | nominal when within the working range of RPM. The voltage | regulator should keep the voltage within that range without | any significant variation. | | Just what are you intending to be warned against? The load | meter gauge shows the load being carried by the generator | system, the ammeter shows whether the generator or battery | is supplying the power being used, An ammeter should be | showing only a slight charge all the time as it keeps the | battery "topped off." If the battery is any good, the | ammeter will return to low indicated charge within a few | minutes after starting the engine. At a low idle, the | battery will show a discharge because the generator is not | carrying the load and the battery is discharging to carry | what the demand is at the time. This is not a problem in | the short term, such as a power-off landing or glide, but | anytime that the engine is in the power range, the generator | [alternator] should be carrying all the load. | | Power relays need about 10 volts to stay engaged. If you | are building a home-built airplane, you could have a yellow | warning light at less than 13.9 volts and a red warning at | 12.8. Open cell no-load voltage is 2.2 volts or 13.2 volts | on a lead/acid battery. | | Certificated aircraft require certificated parts. You can | get a cigarette lighter plug-in monitor. | | | -- | James H. Macklin | ATP,CFI,A&P | | -- | Merry Christmas | Have a Safe and Happy New Year | Live Long and Prosper | Jim Macklin | "markp" wrote in message | ... | | Hi All, | | | | I'm looking for recommendations for a low battery warning | voltage level. I | | was going to use 12.8V - is this liable to be triggered by | noise/dips in the | | bus voltage? My guess is when heaters or motors kick in | there could be a | | momentary drop due to high current that could trigger my | low voltage | | indicator. Also it it worth putting a long time constant | filter on this? | | | | Thanks! | | | | Mark. | | | | | | | | | | |
#7
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In my last 40 years as a professional avionics engineer have I seen this
many errors in a single document. PLEASE take this post and TRASH it. Jim "Jim Macklin" wrote in message news:22mqf.30260$QW2.2267@dukeread08... The 12 volt generator/alternator will be at 14-15 volts nominal when within the working range of RPM. The voltage regulator should keep the voltage within that range without any significant variation. Just what are you intending to be warned against? The load meter gauge shows the load being carried by the generator system, the ammeter shows whether the generator or battery is supplying the power being used, An ammeter should be showing only a slight charge all the time as it keeps the battery "topped off." If the battery is any good, the ammeter will return to low indicated charge within a few minutes after starting the engine. At a low idle, the battery will show a discharge because the generator is not carrying the load and the battery is discharging to carry what the demand is at the time. This is not a problem in the short term, such as a power-off landing or glide, but anytime that the engine is in the power range, the generator [alternator] should be carrying all the load. Power relays need about 10 volts to stay engaged. If you are building a home-built airplane, you could have a yellow warning light at less than 13.9 volts and a red warning at 12.8. Open cell no-load voltage is 2.2 volts or 13.2 volts on a lead/acid battery. Certificated aircraft require certificated parts. You can get a cigarette lighter plug-in monitor. |
#8
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Which error?
-- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P "RST Engineering" wrote in message ... | In my last 40 years as a professional avionics engineer have I seen this | many errors in a single document. | | PLEASE take this post and TRASH it. | | Jim | | | | "Jim Macklin" wrote in message | news:22mqf.30260$QW2.2267@dukeread08... | The 12 volt generator/alternator will be at 14-15 volts | nominal when within the working range of RPM. The voltage | regulator should keep the voltage within that range without | any significant variation. | | Just what are you intending to be warned against? The load | meter gauge shows the load being carried by the generator | system, the ammeter shows whether the generator or battery | is supplying the power being used, An ammeter should be | showing only a slight charge all the time as it keeps the | battery "topped off." If the battery is any good, the | ammeter will return to low indicated charge within a few | minutes after starting the engine. At a low idle, the | battery will show a discharge because the generator is not | carrying the load and the battery is discharging to carry | what the demand is at the time. This is not a problem in | the short term, such as a power-off landing or glide, but | anytime that the engine is in the power range, the generator | [alternator] should be carrying all the load. | | Power relays need about 10 volts to stay engaged. If you | are building a home-built airplane, you could have a yellow | warning light at less than 13.9 volts and a red warning at | 12.8. Open cell no-load voltage is 2.2 volts or 13.2 volts | on a lead/acid battery. | | Certificated aircraft require certificated parts. You can | get a cigarette lighter plug-in monitor. | | |
#9
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I suggest you make the voltage threshold adjustable.
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