| I read about this problem a couple years ago on the list. At the time the Garmin units in my cessna were failing with regularity. I went through a 530, 330, and an audio panel. ...then went looking for the loose ground and found it! no more problems.
so for the health of your avionics, it's good to go through and make sure everything is tight.
Colyn On Mar 7, 2012, at 7:58 AM, F. Barry Knotts wrote:
Had similar issues with just the backup alternator system. I put a
recording voltmeter on the circuit to try to diagnose. Found
voltage spikes that tripped the regulator. Changed alternators,
batteries, a lot of wiring and B&C regulators before I found the
very slightly loose ground connection on the firewall. Hasn't been a
problem since. Would recommend a thorough check of all ground
connections on engine, alternators, batteries and into airframe
before replacing other "parts." I am convinced that your problem is
with a ground as that's probably the only common connection between
the two charging systems.
Barry Knotts
L-IV P, N4XE
On 3/5/2012 8:21 AM, Craig Gainza wrote:
Dear Listers,
Recently, I completed my annual and test flew the airplane.
Upon lifting the gear both primary and secondary alternator
field breakers popped. Pushed them back in and all charging
returned to normal on the primary and secondary alternators.
Landed, checked connections, put in a different battery, ran
through B and C voltage regulator troubleshooting guide (came
out normal) and did a ground run up. When lifting the flaps,
hydraulic pump kicked on both field breakers popped again.
Right now I am assuming it is the voltage regulator (both pri
and sec are B and C), alternator , or a connector.
Anyone have similar issues and can recommend the next course of
action?
Thank you,
Craig Gainza
IV-P TSIOF 550
782 hours and holding
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