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ohioip(at)yahoo.com Guest
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Posted: Sat Aug 23, 2008 8:24 pm Post subject: Tachometer Noise |
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I have a Jabiru 2200 engine and a VDO tachometer. I'm coupling one alternator lead to the tacho signal input. It works fine at lower rpms, but at about 2000 RPM it becomes very erratic. I searched around the internet and found some discussion of the problem as being noise related with general suggestions to install noise filters, series resistors, etc. to correct the problem but few details on the circuit configuration. The most detailed info I saw described a 1 uF coupling capacitor between the alternator and the tach with a 10K resistor and a clamping diode connected to ground on the tach side of the capacitor. Has anyone on the list tackled this problem?
Thanks,
Mike
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jetboy
Joined: 22 Jul 2006 Posts: 233
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Posted: Sat Aug 23, 2008 9:33 pm Post subject: Re: Tachometer Noise |
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The earlier Jabirus used a magnetic pickup at the ringear driving a VDO tach / digital hourmeter and they later changed to the same pickup placed near metal tabs on the flywheel (and different rpm calibration setting for this) This is the normal way for larger diesel engines and the like.
You are likely to have trouble using the alternator wires as source because none of them connect to ground and the regulator will cause extra pulses on the lines as it does its job. I do connect across the windings and use a digital frequency counter for calibration of my other system, and that works OK
Ralph
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_________________ Ralph - CH701 / 2200a |
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nuckolls.bob(at)cox.net Guest
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Posted: Sun Aug 24, 2008 6:22 am Post subject: Tachometer Noise |
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At 10:33 PM 8/23/2008 -0700, you wrote:
Quote: |
The earlier Jabirus used a magnetic pickup at the ringear driving a VDO
tach / digital hourmeter and they later changed to the same pickup placed
near metal tabs on the flywheel (and different rpm calibration setting for
this) This is the normal way for larger diesel engines and the like.
You are likely to have trouble using the alternator wires as source
because none of them connect to ground and the regulator will cause extra
pulses on the lines as it does its job. I do connect across the windings
and use a digital frequency counter for calibration of my other system,
and that works OK
Ralph
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An excellent response Ralph. I've always been a bit
mystified by some system designer's decisions to attempt
a stable deduction of alternator fundamental frequencies
when combined with a horrid mix of strong components of
other noises! Then one must deal with belt/gearing
ratios to scale the resulting signal to some number that
represents real crankshaft RPM.
The next worse signal source is magneto p-leads, but
we've learned to deal with those to a reasonably
successful degree.
Mike, there ARE some things that could be tried
which are something of a shot-in-the-dark. Without
doing a lucid examination of the signals the tachometer
is attempting to resolve, it's difficult to offer
you a high-probability "fix".
The absolutely best signal for tachometer success
comes from some form of dedicated sensor. Magnetic,
optical, closed contacts, etc. etc. But of
course, these need to be added to an existing engine
and one would really LIKE to get say 20 pulses per
engine revolution for the easiest crafting of
supporting electronics.
The instability might be a function of levels, or
as Ralph mentioned, the effects of extraneous
stimulus from the voltage regulator.
The fact that your instability happens at the higher
RPMs suggest these causes as good candidates. If
I were to take a 95% probability shot as suggesting
some signal conditioning, I'd go for a band-pass
filter (op amp and hand-full of jelly-bean parts)
combined with a squaring section (over-driven op
amp) as a means by which undesirable signals can
be filtered out from the signal-of-interest.
However, it MAY be that simple combinations of
resistors, capacitors and perhaps some zener
diodes would make your present combination useable
using some parts from Radio Shack.
Question: How much $time$ do you want or are
willing to spend? We KNOW that your present
system can be made to function as needed . . . but
it MIGHT evolve into quite a 'science project'.
If you're interested in expanding your knowledge
base . . . particularly with a goal of sharing
your discoveries with others and don't mind the
$time$, I'm sure that I and others her on the
List would be glad to give you suggestions.
On the other hand, if you're driving toward
first-light-under-the-wheels, perhaps a more
conservative approach is indicated . . . an
alternate pick-off scheme would be quick and
a sure bet.
Continue to search the web for situations where
others have encountered the same problem and
have discovered a 'fix'. If you don't get some
encouragement from that effort, make the choice
between doing a low-risk change of technologies
-OR- exploring signal conditioning alternatives
with the present setup.
Are you an electron-chaser of any degree? Do
you own or have access to a bench power supply,
and perhaps a 'scope? Do you know from the
VDO data what kind of signal the instrument
expects to see? Since this system runs from a
undetermined belt or gear ratio, does the
instrument have some form of calibration
pot? We'll need to know a lot more about the
instrument itself to narrow down the range
of techniques that could be applied to the
problem. What's the VDO part number? Perhaps
I or someone else can discover some useful
things about this critter.
One thing that would help is for me (or
perhaps Ralph) to put our hands on the instrument.
A few minutes on the bench would tell us what
kind of pristine signal the tach likes to see
and would put some bounds on the approach to
crafting a useful filter. There's NOTHING
that replaces NUMBERS to design to.
I (and perhaps others on the List) have an interest
in deducing a filter that would make your system work.
But we could spend a lot of YOUR $time$ to make
that happen and we're 100.0% sure of success. Only
you are in a position to make the well considered choice.
Bob . . .
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ohioip(at)yahoo.com Guest
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Posted: Mon Aug 25, 2008 6:13 am Post subject: Tachometer Noise |
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Ralph & Bob-
Thanks much for your excellent advice. My motivation for asking came from the fact that both Jabiru and VDO documentation discuss using the alternator as a signal source. After experiencing the noise problem I surfed around the internet and found comments to the effect that others had used a filter to stabilize the system, but no one provided details of the filter configuration. Given the number of Jabiru installations out there I expected to find a relatively easy, ready-made solution.
Bob, in answer to your question, I am an electrical/electronics type and worked in aerospace for many years, so on one hand I am intrigued by the problem and am tempted to design a solution. But, at the end of the day, I think the best, most reliable and most elegant solution is to just switch to a dedicated sensor as you and Ralph suggest.
Thanks again,
Mike
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nuckolls.bob(at)cox.net Guest
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Posted: Mon Aug 25, 2008 7:20 am Post subject: Tachometer Noise |
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At 07:09 AM 8/25/2008 -0700, you wrote:
Quote: |
Ralph & Bob-
Thanks much for your excellent advice. My motivation for asking came from
the fact that both Jabiru and VDO documentation discuss using the
alternator as a signal source. After experiencing the noise problem I
surfed around the internet and found comments to the effect that others
had used a filter to stabilize the system, but no one provided details of
the filter configuration. Given the number of Jabiru installations out
there I expected to find a relatively easy, ready-made solution.
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Agreed.
Quote: | Bob, in answer to your question, I am an electrical/electronics type and
worked in aerospace for many years, so on one hand I am intrigued by the
problem and am tempted to design a solution.
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These things are always fun if not practical . . . but
then education was NEVER inexpensive. I presume this is
an analog tach . . . but without a cal-adjustment,
I'm mystified as to how calibration is accomplished.
If it's digital, then the HARD part is a multiply-by-
K-divide-by-N circuitry needed to scale the sensed
signal frequency to something that displays true
engine RPM. I'd be interested in seeing what folks
are using to make this happen.
In the analog world, we used to drive a transistor
with the distributor's ignition points signal
to get a pretty clean square wave at the collector.
A small capacitor and two diodes differentiate the
the edges of the square wave and depended on the
meter's inertia to integrate the frequency. A potentiometer
provided a means to calibrate the reading to display
RPM. I built a bucket full of these things for
the hot-rod guys using surplus meter movements.
Quote: | But, at the end of the day, I think the best, most reliable and most
elegant solution is to just switch to a dedicated sensor as you and Ralph
suggest.
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Yeah, life IS that way sometimes. What does this
engine use for ignition triggering?
Bob . . .
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