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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
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Posted: Tue Jan 05, 2010 7:09 am Post subject: Question about 16V POLYFUSER Radial Leaded Resettable PTC |
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At 11:16 AM 1/4/2010, you wrote:
Hi Jeff
I designed and have been using an electrical system similar to the
EXP bus for over a year, for no reason other than experimentation. I
chose a variety of these, ranging from 1A up to 16A... They work as
advertised, and have found their trip performance similar to that of
CB's, i.e. a 2A polyswitch probably won't trip at 2A, unless the
device draws 2A for minutes almost. 2.5A will trip after a few
seconds, 5A will trip after a second, and 100A will trip almost
instantaneously.
<snip>
So to answer your questions, yes I think they can replace CB's or
standard fuses, but I don't think they should. The fact that they
reset themselves whenever power is cycled means that a tripped system
will not stay tripped if you turn off the master switch. Standard
fuses are much better-suited to the task. And that's in my humble opinion
Great observation.
Bob . . .
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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
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Posted: Tue Jan 05, 2010 7:12 am Post subject: Question about 16V POLYFUSER Radial Leaded Resettable PTC |
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At 08:28 PM 1/4/2010, you wrote:
Quote: |
See AC 43.13, chapter 11 quoted below:
11-50. RESETTABLE CIRCUIT PROTECTION
DEVICES.
a. All resettable type circuit breakers
must open the circuit irrespective of the position
of the operating control when an overload
or circuit fault exists. Such circuit breakers are
referred to as “trip free.”
b. Automatic reset circuit breakers, that
automatically reset themselves periodically, are
not recommended as circuit protection devices
for aircraft.
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This paragraph has been in there for decades . . .
LONG before things like the polyfuse came along.
The self-resetting breakers of yesteryear were
simple adaptations of manual resetting breakers.
Many cars used self-resetting breakers on headlight
circuits in lieu of fuses.
These devices would ALWAYS reset when they cooled.
Unlike the polyfuse which will probably stay tripped
until power is removed, the self-resetting breaker
of 1950 would definitely oscillate between a zero-
current to fault-current condition as long as power
was still on.
Bob . . .
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marcausman
Joined: 08 Feb 2007 Posts: 70
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Posted: Tue Jan 05, 2010 7:21 pm Post subject: Re: Question about 16V POLYFUSER Radial Leaded Resettable |
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"Probably" ?
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_________________ Marc Ausman
http://www.verticalpower.com "Move up to a modern electrical system"
RV-7 IO-390 Flying |
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al38kit
Joined: 13 Jul 2009 Posts: 21
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Posted: Tue Jan 05, 2010 8:23 pm Post subject: Re: Question about 16V POLYFUSER Radial Leaded Resettable |
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I have an EXP bus that I have been considering for my project. (That I got for a $40, delivered.) It looks like a slick unit.
I can understand the concern for a circuit resetting itself after the power is restored...but isn't that a reason we put switches on things?...Like leave that circuit off if it has a problem...
Sorry, just don't see the design as having much of a downside. If you think you may accidentally turn the thing back on, put some red tape on the switch or something...pull the wire.
Al
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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
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Posted: Wed Jan 06, 2010 9:41 am Post subject: Question about 16V POLYFUSER Radial Leaded Resettable PTC |
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At 10:23 PM 1/5/2010, you wrote:
Quote: |
I have an EXP bus that I have been considering for my
project. (That I got for a $40, delivered.) It looks like a slick unit
Sorry, just don't see the design as having much of a downside. If
you think you may accidentally turn the thing back on, put some red
tape on the switch or something...pull the wire.
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Have you read the discussions on this topic?
Goto http://aeroelectric.com and do a a site
search on . . .
exp bus
Keep in mind that a polyswitch MUST be powered to
STAY tripped. Fault current is reduced to a "safe"
level thus keeping it hot after a trip.
Bob . . .
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