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Braided ground strap to battery?

 
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crabandy(at)yahoo.com
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 05, 2013 8:18 am    Post subject: Braided ground strap to battery? Reply with quote

Might be a stupid question but, I was wondering about the possibility of using a braided ground strap from b and c to go from the battery to the grounding forest of tabs on the firewall.
Thanks
Andy
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JOHN TIPTON



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Location: Torquay - England

PostPosted: Tue Mar 05, 2013 8:32 am    Post subject: Braided ground strap to battery? Reply with quote

So long as it cannot touch any live (plus volts) contacts - OK, I would think

John

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----x--O--x----

On 5 Mar 2013, at 16:16, Andy <crabandy(at)yahoo.com> wrote:

Quote:



Might be a stupid question but, I was wondering about the possibility of using a braided ground strap from b and c to go from the battery to the grounding forest of tabs on the firewall.
Thanks
Andy
Sent from my iPhone






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FisherPaulA(at)johndeere.
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 05, 2013 8:50 am    Post subject: Braided ground strap to battery? Reply with quote

That's what I did. Actually I did three straps:
- Engine to Battery ground
- Engine to forest of tabs on firewall
- Battery ground to forest of tabs on firewall

So far, no problems in 3.5 years. It's probably more than is really required, but I already had the extra strap and I didn't figure it would hurt. Belt and suspenders I guess...

Paul A. Fisher
RV-7A N18PF
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mrspudandcompany(at)veriz
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 05, 2013 9:51 am    Post subject: Braided ground strap to battery? Reply with quote

Quote:
That's what I did. Actually I did three straps:
- Engine to Battery ground
- Engine to forest of tabs on firewall
- Battery ground to forest of tabs on firewall


With multiple ground paths to the battery,
from the above configuration, isn't there a
chance of introducing ground loops,
causing noise problems??

Roger

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FisherPaulA(at)johndeere.
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 05, 2013 10:56 am    Post subject: Braided ground strap to battery? Reply with quote

Good question. My thought was that the systems that would be susceptible to noise (all of the audio components) are inside the cabin - nothing forward of the firewall. So for those components there is only one path to the battery. Only the starter and the alternator would have dual paths. Obviously the starter is only used once per flight, so it's not a problem, so that just leaves the alternator. I can't explain the physics of WHY it's not a problem. I can only state that the fact that there ARE no problems! YMMV.

- Paul

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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 05, 2013 11:18 am    Post subject: Braided ground strap to battery? Reply with quote

At 10:16 AM 3/5/2013, you wrote:
Quote:

Might be a stupid question but, I was wondering about the
possibility of using a braided ground strap from b and c to go from
the battery to the grounding forest of tabs on the firewall.


The legacy rationale for ground straps of many
finely drawn wires was common in vehicles for
grounding an engine to the vehicle frame or maintaining
electrical continuity across moveable joints in
the machine. The engine needed to move around in
its mounts but often needed grounding integrity
for starter motors and generators/alternators.
Electrical connections that are in motion with
respect to each other demand a conductor that
is exceedingly resistant to flex failure (See
explanation of design goals for 19+strand wire
on airplanes in the 'Connection).

How long a strap are we talking about? Have
you considered welding cable for BOTH battery
(-) and (+) connections? It's a good thing to
reduce the bending moments on battery terminals
due to stiff wire. Some builders have experienced
battery post failures when short lengths of 2AWG
'aircraft' wire was used to jumper a battery(+)
to the contactor.

I would recommend that you consider 4AWG welding
cable jumpers for both battery connections. Then
consider what materials make the most sense for
cost, weight, system performance, or wire that your
hangar mate donated to the project.

A braided strap from fire wall ground to crankcase
is a good thing. A welding cable jumper is equally
good. I'm aware of no particular advantage for
using a fabricated braid-strap to make connections
to the battery . . . but it wouldn't hurt anything
either.
Bob . . .


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crabandy(at)yahoo.com
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 05, 2013 2:52 pm    Post subject: Braided ground strap to battery? Reply with quote

Thanks for the replies!
I can make the 2 AWG (what I currently have in my shop) work but the service loop is kinda big. I was thinking about having the ground strap made (about 6 inches) by BandC and for the same price as the welding cable I think the strap would fit nicer.



From: "Robert L. Nuckolls, III" <nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com>
To: aeroelectric-list(at)matronics.com
Sent: Tuesday, March 5, 2013 1:18 PM
Subject: Re: Braided ground strap to battery?
--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "Robert L. Nuckolls, III" <nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com (nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com)>

At 10:16 AM 3/5/2013, you wrote:
Quote:
--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: Andy <crabandy(at)yahoo.com (crabandy(at)yahoo.com)>


Might be a stupid question but, I was wondering about the possibility of using a braided ground strap from b and c to go from the battery to the grounding forest of tabs on the firewall.


The legacy rationale for ground straps of many
finely drawn wires was common in vehicles for
grounding an engine to the vehicle frame or maintaining
electrical continuity across moveable joints in
the machine. The  engine needed to move around in
its mounts but often needed grounding integrity
for starter motors and generators/alternators.
Electrical connections that are in motion with
respect to each other demand a conductor that
is exceedingly resistant to flex failure (See
explanation of design goals for 19+strand wire
on airplanes in the 'Connection).

How long a strap are we talking about? Have
you considered welding cable for BOTH battery
(-) and (+) connections? It's a good thing to
reduce the bending moments on battery terminals
  due to stiff wire. Some builders have experienced
battery post failures when short lengths of 2AWG
'aircraft' wire was used to jumper a battery(+)
to the contactor.

I would recommend that you consider 4AWG welding
cable jumpers for both battery connections. Then
consider what materials make the most sense for
cost, weight, system performance, or wire that your
hangar mate donated to the project.

A braided strap from fire wall ground to crankcase
is a good thing. A welding cable jumper is equally
good. I'm aware of no particular advantage for
using a fabricated braid-strap to make connections
to the battery . . . but it wouldn't hurt anything
either.

[quote][b]


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