Mailing List flyrotary@lancaironline.net Message #58600
From: Andrew Martin <andrew@martinag.com.au>
Subject: Re: [FlyRotary] Re: Electrical
Date: Wed, 18 Jul 2012 00:13:00 +0800
To: Rotary motors in aircraft <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Steve
A couple of months could have it out of the workshop and on the strip, but work gets in the way so will probably take me a couple of years. for me, reward is in the build, finishing it will just have me start another.
The 20b is sitting patiently waiting for its new airframe. it was initially acquired for the lightwing but decided this plane would never allow the 20b to see its potential so a renesis replaced it, really pleased with the renesis, started it earlier in the year, ran sweet first up, gave me so much confidence that the rotary is such a great choice, dispelled some doubts cast by the peanut gallery in the aeroclub. with what I've learnt so far with this build the next one will be brilliant. just gotta decide what to build.

Put a 1200m strip on the farm back in March, now home to VH-ZOE a turboprop thrush agplane owned by a mate. the lightwing is being built in a shed 12km from the strip so first taxi could be interesting

Andrew

On Tue, Jul 17, 2012 at 7:36 PM, Stephen Izett <steveizett@me.com> wrote:
Andrew

How are you going with your homebuild?
At one stage you had a 20b didn't you?

Cheers

Steve Izett

On 17/07/2012, at 6:42 PM, Andrew Martin wrote:

Steve, your probably perfectly safe with your Alternator, chances are that if it ever does fail it'll fail dead, I've just had a few alternator failures on trucks and tractors that I wouldn't like to see happen in the plane, so for me the B&C LM3 regulator looked like a fairly easy solution to being able to shut the Alt down. My sparkie suggested using the biggest alternator I could fit as he said having an Alternator that is working closer to its capacity is more likely to fail than a lightly loaded one.

As for your questions, it all depends on what your comfortable with.


Andrew

On Tue, Jul 17, 2012 at 3:06 PM, Stephen Izett <steveizett@me.com> wrote:
Thanks Andrew

I have all those diagrams etc.
Over the years I have built up a respect for Tracy and some others in this list for their thinking and keeping things simple.

Your opinion is pretty much in line with what I was thinking in regard to the Battery being a backup to the Alt.
The Renesis alt was big and bulky so I replaced it with a small one and cant remember what it was out of.
I'll do a load test once I've got all systems working.
Why did you convert to external regulation? I thought the vehicle alternators were pretty clean and reliable? 

What I am struggling with is:
Modern auto electric systems just don't fail very often (Has any one here had a failure of basic circuit feeds?)
Redundancy can introduce other failure modes or possible complexity in an emergency.
When I trained twenty five years ago on the ILS system at Perth Airport, if my memory serves me right, the main reason for the system being down was the arbitrator failing, not the actual A and B systems.
Hey I'm going to go with the experts like lectric Bob.
Just want to KIS.

Questions:
Is there a reliable modern replacement to the old, huge, heavy contactors?
Redundancy of Fuel pumps (a given)
Redundancy of Alternator (happy to manage the risk of losing it with voltage and current alarms)
Redundancy of EFI/IGN (managed by EC2?)
It seem to me to come back to the redundancy of the main battery system.
So:
Single Alternator, Battery system, Auto Key switch (replacing battery annually, clear current and voltage alarms). 
OR
Single Alternator and dual Batteries (this then introduces (Z-19) 2 contactors, a diode and three switches.

Please have mercy on me, if I don't understand!


Cheers

Steve Izett



Steve Izett
On 17/07/2012, at 2:21 PM, Andrew Martin wrote:

Steve
Have you got a copy of Bob Nuckolls  Book? Along with Tracy's diagrams in his ec2/3 manual you'll have all the infomation you require

What alternator are you using? I ended up using a 60 or 70 amp unit out of a subaru and converted it to external regulation as the 100amp unit that came with the renesis was going to be a real bugger to make work. cannot remember the details now but at the time it seemed like half the regulator was in the alt and half in the cars EC(which I didn't have).

My 2c opinion is that the Alternator is the main source of power, the battery is a backup. so battery should be sized to suit your desired Alternator off endurance, which will be specific to your aircrafts minimum electric power consumption. If your ever planing on flying east or up north from Perth I'd suggest to try for 3-4 hours battery endurance just to make sure you can safely make a landing area near civilization.

Andrew Martin


On Tue, Jul 17, 2012 at 12:55 PM, Stephen Izett <steveizett@me.com> wrote:
Tracy

Have you got any further with your electrical wiring description you mentioned earlier.
Also, what setup do you have in the RV4 & 8 ?
What battery/s electrical system do you employ?

Steve Izett

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--
Regards

Andrew Martin
Martin Ag
275 Newmarracarra Rd
Moonyoonooka WA 6532

0427477144
08 99241145
andrew@martinag.com.au




--
Regards

Andrew Martin
Martin Ag
275 Newmarracarra Rd
Moonyoonooka WA 6532

0427477144
08 99241145
andrew@martinag.com.au
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