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Rotax Voltage Regulator

 
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Guy Buchanan



Joined: 16 Jul 2006
Posts: 1204
Location: Ramona, CA

PostPosted: Sat Aug 18, 2007 1:44 pm    Post subject: Rotax Voltage Regulator Reply with quote

All,
It looks like my Rotax 582 three phase voltage regulator's
dying. (It will occasionally go over voltage. I can re-set it and get
it to work, but it's happening more often now.)
Does anyone have a recommended replacement? I've mounted it
in the engine compartment to minimize electrical noise in the cockpit
and I suspect things are a little hot for the stock Rotax unit. Has
anyone tried any of the Harley replacements? Any after-market units?
Or should I just increase the cooling to the Rotax unit?

Thanks,
Guy Buchanan
San Diego, CA
K-IV 1200 / 582-C / Warp / 100% done, thanks mostly to Bob Ducar.


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Guy Buchanan
Deceased K-IV 1200
A glider pilot too.
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jetboy



Joined: 22 Jul 2006
Posts: 233

PostPosted: Sat Aug 18, 2007 3:53 pm    Post subject: Re: Rotax Voltage Regulator Reply with quote

Guy,
Are you sure its not the battery geeting aged. regulators dont usually deteriorate in the way you describe, but a poor internal resistance battery may bring on the symptom.

Ralph


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Guy Buchanan



Joined: 16 Jul 2006
Posts: 1204
Location: Ramona, CA

PostPosted: Sat Aug 18, 2007 5:35 pm    Post subject: Rotax Voltage Regulator Reply with quote

At 04:53 PM 8/18/2007, you wrote:
Quote:
Are you sure its not the battery geeting aged. regulators dont
usually deteriorate in the way you describe, but a poor internal
resistance battery may bring on the symptom.

I'm intrigued, since this battery has been nearly dead twice and
resurrected with a BatteryMinder. I read Bob's section on regulator
failures and it seems like the over-voltage condition should be
permanent, and not intermittent. (It seems like it doesn't work when
cold, then with my switching it in and out it finally starts to
regulate the voltage. Once it's working it never quits. And if I
re-start it seems to work fine.) I'll dig into Bob's book to try to
find an easy way to check internal resistance.

Thanks,
Guy Buchanan
San Diego, CA
K-IV 1200 / 582-C / Warp / 100% done, thanks mostly to Bob Ducar.


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Guy Buchanan
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nuckollsr(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Sat Aug 18, 2007 9:31 pm    Post subject: Rotax Voltage Regulator Reply with quote

At 06:26 PM 8/18/2007 -0700, you wrote:

Quote:


At 04:53 PM 8/18/2007, you wrote:
>Are you sure its not the battery geeting aged. regulators dont usually
>deteriorate in the way you describe, but a poor internal resistance
>battery may bring on the symptom.

I'm intrigued, since this battery has been nearly dead twice and
resurrected with a BatteryMinder. I read Bob's section on regulator
failures and it seems like the over-voltage condition should be permanent,
and not intermittent. (It seems like it doesn't work when cold, then with
my switching it in and out it finally starts to regulate the voltage. Once
it's working it never quits. And if I re-start it seems to work fine.)
I'll dig into Bob's book to try to find an easy way to check internal
resistance.

Thanks,
Guy Buchanan

Intermittent voltage excursions both upward and downward
are manifestations of ageing components and/or internal
connections that have become less than the best we know
how to do.

I believe John Deere (and others) offer a 3-phase
rectifier/regulator for their 25-40 amp PM alternators.
I searched the web hoping to find some maintenance
data or at least some part numbers. No joy.
Anyone out there have some experience with the larger
3-phase PM alternator products.

I've got to visit a customer Monday on the west side
of town near a John Deere dealership. I'll see if there's
a helpful individual there who can give me more data
on the larger PM alternator systems.

Now, this is an excellent DIY project. We've explored
the inner workings of the various PM alternator rectifier/
regulators. I've taken an exemplar single phase R/R
schematic and added the SCR and diode to accommodate
a 3 phase alternator. It's posted at:

http://www.aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Schematics/3-Phase_PM_Rectifier_Regulator.gif

This is a case where the electronics are pretty
much a no-brainer but the task to be mounted and
solved is getting the heat out. Average voltage drop
in one of these regulators is 2.2 volts. So if you're
dragging 30A from a really husky alternator, the
R/R needs to get rid of 66W of heat.

This is where attention is paid to the diodes and
SCRs to use beefy devices with low thermal resistances
and then mount them in an enclosure suited for conducting
that much heat out of the box. Problems with longevity
of the PM R/R have roots more in cooling than in the
absolute ratings of the components.

For this design, I might even consider putting the
hot parts on a finned heat sink and blowing air through
the assembly. There's a wealth of 12V DC brushless
fans out there to consider. I think I'd also add
some form of temperature sensing to at least light
a warning light and allow the pilot to consider a
temporary load reduction.

Just some food for thought. As soon as the support
tools and materials for our hardwood floor project
are out of the garage, I'll get started on the alternator
drive stand . . . should be able to run some experimental
regulator/alternator combinations on the bench this fall.

Bob . . .


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PostPosted: Sun Aug 19, 2007 12:31 pm    Post subject: Rotax Voltage Regulator Reply with quote

Rotax rectifier / regulators (and the other motorcycle types too) are not unproblematic. As Gilles found out by direct experiment at nominal power the maximum temperature for the 912 / 914 series R/R is minus 59° Celsius:<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />
http://contrails.free.fr/elec_ducati.php
This is somewhere in the vicinity of the liquid CO2, please forgive me that I cannot transfer it to Fahrenheit units by heart (Wink.
I used a standard 3” vent from a computer power unit mounted upon the cooling fins to make the system reliable, as Bob mentioned too. Nevertheless the power output of the 2 phase Rotax alternator is marginal.
A friend experienced a trip of the main circuit breaker when operating the flaps at idle. Imagine what would have happened with an electrical dependent 914 engine. His Dynon and his GPS went black too (which is not an issue at the home airport). I am aware that he might beef up his 7Ah battery a little bit, too (Wink
Increased use of glass panel instruments with reasonable brightness, strobes etc. would ask for a state-of-the-art generator system for the future. It is not very elegant to use a reduction gear and then mount a generator driven by a belt from the prop axis to increase rpms again. It is more elegant to mount a second generator the crankshaft itself rotating at some 5000rpm at the back of the 912/914, which has been done:
http://contrails.free.fr/elec_second_alternateur.php
If You can live with one sole generator providing sufficient power, the standard Rotax system should be modified.
With the existing standard 2phase coil system I can imagine that a more modern regulator could work not at the frequency determined by engine rotation, but at a higher frequency as a real switching regulator with a corresponding higher efficiency; maybe some inductivity would have to be added.
I would however prefer another way of solving the problem. As the rpm is high enough, why not integrate a common 3phase generator into the original site of the Rotax coils? One wound have to redesign the (presumably 9) stator coils for the given dimensions and add a rotor with coil. Add a standard regulator and You are done: greater power mainly because of better efficiency, no high frequency switching problems, standard technology and reliability, no belt to break, no hump in streamlined cowlings… Would be just a standard generator put into the Rotax.
By the way: You could even get rid of any sliprings without any electric change at all. Honda has done that on their CB500f motorcycles even some years ago:
http://www.autoschrauber.de/content/000058/image/limakomplett.jpg
The only disadvantage is the introduction of an air gap. When reliability is an issue, that could be a good trade-off for aircraft use anyway: almost no moving parts J.
As Bob already stated, it would be an excellent DIY – project - not without future potential.

Richard
[quote][b]


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